Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
"In three to five years, people with red pines can expect to lose them," he said.
"Could you make a design of mountains with cedars and red pines?"
Red pines are an important timber crop, but not in the metropolitan area.
The park is also home to a large plantation of Red Pine.
It contains the largest stand of old growth Red Pines.
In time red pines and spruces may become dominant.
Red pines have almost completely succumbed to scale.
All translations here are Red Pine's, except where noted.
Even in the stand of snapped-off red pines, Mr. White saw hope.
Red Pines was a substance-abuse treatment center on the edge of Stanville.
Umeda, a district on the north side of the city, is well known for its cedar trees, while red pines are also common in other areas.
The Red Pine is the state tree of Minnesota.
Perched on a bluff amid red pines, the building commands a spectacular view of the mountains above Sarajevo.
Hemlocks were common and there was also a stately stand of mature red pines that he, as a boy, had helped his grandfather plant.
The layouts have fairways framed by tall red pines and continuing mountain views.
Still, Arkady found himself breathing easier when the red pines gave way to a mix of ash and birch.
Red Pine is a coniferous evergreen tree characterized by tall, straight growth in a variety of habitats.
In Japan it is most commonly associated with Japanese Red Pine.
In Ama-no-mori night was coming on, the shadows lengthening across the cryptomeria and carefully groomed red pines.
Translated from the Chinese by Red Pine.
Blofeld mentored Red Pine in his translation work.
Jim White, the state forester for Bennington County, walked into a stand of red pines a few days ago and saw a disaster area.
An 18-hole golf course is expected to begin construction next summer and an executive conference center is planned for Red Pine Peak.
Eastern white pines are dominant, with red pines clustered atop the sandstone cliffs along the water's edge.
Red Pine may refer to:
It is on a level lot and is surrounded by Norway Pines.
He is interred at Norway Pine Grove Cemetery in South Paris, Maine.
I rode 40 miles through Norway pines, over manageable hills and past gorgeous little lakes and filled my water bottle from one of the rivers because there were no towns.
Fifty foot trusses made of Norway Pine from nearby Bois Blanc Island supported the roof, and 45 tons of native stone formed the original building.
Other names sometimes used include Riga Pine and Norway Pine, and Mongolian Pine for var.
Bulldozers are already eating away at the edges, preparing the ground for two new jails: an 800-bed women's jail already under construction where Norway pines stood, and another 855-bed jail.
In the Upper Midwest of the United States it is sometimes known by the confusing name Norway Pine even though it is not native to Norway.
On our left we saw a clearing with an alley of Norway pines leading up to a rustic building on the scale of the great wooden "camps" in the Adirondacks.
The red pine (Pinus resinosa) is pine native to North America.
The larvae feed on Pinus species, including Pinus resinosa.
The larvae feed on the seeds of Pinus resinosa and Pinus banksiana.
White pine (Pinus strobus) and red pine (Pinus resinosa), are also an important part of this mixed forest.
Winter foods in New York include eastern white pine, red pine (Pinus resinosa), white spruce, paper birch, and aspens.
This combination of characters is specific to the genus Pinus, and the seeds are most similar to the modern Pinus resinosa and Pinus tropicalis.
The larvae feed on various pine species, including Pinus resinosa, Pinus rigida and Pinus sylvestris as well as Larix laricina.
Described as new to science in 1986, it was found in Wisconsin, where it was growing on sandy soil in a nursery bed containing Norway pine (Pinus resinosa).
The timber of European Black Pine is similar to that of Scots Pine (Pinus sylvestris) and Red Pine (Pinus resinosa), being moderately hard and straight-grained.
The prevalence in the canopy of red pine (Pinus resinosa) and red spruce (Picea rubens) distinguish the transition forests of New England from those in the Great Lakes region to the west.
There is evidence of the benefit to trees of this arrangement: in one experiment where P. involutus was cultivated on the root exudate of red pine (Pinus resinosa), the root showed markedly increased resistance to pathogenic strains of the ubiquitous soil fungus Fusarium oxysporum.