Sentences with phrase «young saplings»

The phrase "young saplings" means young trees or plants that have recently grown and are not yet fully grown. Full definition
Mainly, other Atheistic trees around this young atheistic sapling of a tree might be in the way and thusly the older trees diminishes the light needed for this Atheistic sapling's nourishment, The Atheistically young sapling of a tree tends to be needful of Light so this Atheistic sapling extends its» reach higher committing its» trunk to weaken.
Mainly, other Atheiistic trees might be in the way and thusly deminishing the light needed for this Atheistic sapling's nourishment, The Atheistically young sapling of a tree tends to be then needful of Light so this Atheistic sapling extends its» reach higher commiting its» trunk to weaken.
Some of them are essential for young saplings as they establish themselves in the forest.
Although things were not this bad at the shack, Leopold noted ongoing plant damage caused by deer, which in the absence of wolves calmly stood their ground and browsed young saplings down to nothing.
So instead of making trees grow faster, carbon dioxide fertilisation could result in a greater number of trees, or more growth in young saplings that the study didn't sample.
In many forests, these fallen trees actually become «nurse logs» — foundations from which young saplings grow.
Eventually, we plan to donate the acreage used for restoration back to the community once it's been filled with healthy young saplings, and then repeat the cycle.
The problem of the swamp of Japan is not that Japanese culture rots Christian teaching but that, apart from a clear connection to the Church, the young sapling will die.
Some of the moisture drips off the redwood leaves, landing on the forest floor to water the trees and young saplings.
Then as we look closer we see that the father tree has opened the canopy above to provide light for the young saplings to grow toward.
Word play and language remain integral ingredients in, If Only, 2004 - a phrase of conditional optimism that can also be taken from the French word for bottle rack, If, which can be derived from the history of the peg, an object that began life as a young sapling branch of a Yew tree.
Hooks and nails and bolts stuck through it and then discarded, its young sapling invisible to all but Penone, who exposes it to the light once again.
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