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  • 23
    Apr
    2013
    1:00pm, EDT

    Auburn fans' beloved oak trees cut down after poisoning

    Michael Chang / Getty Images

    The sun rises the morning that the live oak trees will be cut down by crews from the Asplundh tree service on April 23, 2013 at Toomer's Corner in Auburn, Alabama.

    Michael Chang / Getty Images

    A member of the Asplundh tree service helps cut down an oak tree on April 23, at Toomer's Corner in Auburn, Alabama.

    Dave Martin / AP

    Auburn University employee Dinah Decker, center, wipes tears from eyes as she watches as city workers cut down the poisoned oak trees at Toomer's Corner at the entrance to Auburn University in Auburn, Ala., on April 23.

    Auburn University removed the dying oaks at Toomer's Corner Tuesday morning, after they were poisoned by a rival fan shortly following the 2010 Iron Bowl. Harvey Updyke Jr. is serving a jail term after pleading guilty to spiking the oaks with a powerful herbicide, and experts say they can't be saved. Workers used chainsaws and heavy equipment to remove what's left of the once-lush hardwoods at Toomer's Corner. Auburn fans traditionally roll the trees with toilet paper after a big victory, and tens of thousands rolled the trees after the spring football game last Saturday.

    -- The Associated Press

    Dave Martin / AP, file

    Fans roll the poisoned oak trees at Toomer's Corner one final time following Auburn's A-Day spring NCAA college football game at Jordan-Hare Stadium in Auburn, Ala., on April 20, 2013. The tradition of "rolling" the trees at Toomer's Corner following a win by the football team is coming to an end.

    Dave Martin / AP

    A photographer uses his cell phone to photograph the oak trees at Toomer's Corner at the entrance to Auburn University in Auburn, Ala., Tuesday, April 23, 2013. City workers cut down the poisoned oak trees at the entrance to Auburn University.

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    6 comments

    Very happy to hear that the low-life scumbag P.O.S. looser who did this is in jail!

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  • 5
    Jan
    2013
    8:14pm, EST

    Joerg Carstensen / AFP - Getty Images

    Throwing out the Christmas tree goes to another level in Germany

    A man competes in the 'Knut Christmas Tree Throwing Championship' on Jan. 5, in Berlin, Germany.

    Comment

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  • 14
    Nov
    2012
    6:57pm, EST

    From backyard to center stage: Rockefeller Center Christmas tree stands tall in spotlight

    Rich Schultz / AP

    Crews use a crane to hoist a 80 ft. tall, 50 ft. diameter, 10-ton Norway Spruce tree from its base at the home of Joseph Balku in Flanders, N.J., on Nov. 13. The tree was laid onto a flatbed truck and transported to New York City where it is this year's Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree.

    Rich Schultz / AP

    Crews cut down an 80 ft. tall, 50 ft. diameter, 10-ton Norway Spruce tree that will be this year's Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree at the home of Joseph Balku in Flanders, N.J., on Nov. 13. The tree survived the winds of Hurricane Sandy that left a path of destruction in this New Jersey town and left Balku without electricity for weeks.

    By Natalia Jimenez, NBC News

    A day ago Joseph Balku’s Norway Spruce stood 80-feet tall outside his home in Flanders, N.J. Today it is 50 miles away, the new holiday centerpiece of New York City’s Rockefeller Plaza (also home to NBC News). Over the next two weeks, the tree will be decorated with more than 30,000 multi-colored lights on 5-miles of wire. The 80-year old tree has added meaning, it has been dubbed a “Sandy survivor,” coming from an area affected by the recent storm that wreaked havoc across the Northeast. According to AP:

    Balku says he watched the tree, which weighs 10 tons and is 50 feet in diameter, as it swayed in the backyard of his Mount Olive property. Balku says it had been bundled for protection. He lost two other trees and just got electricity back over the weekend.

    The tree’s arrival in Midtown serves as an unofficial kick-off to the quickly approaching holiday season. This year’s tree-lighting ceremony will be held on Nov. 28, featuring Cee Lo Green and Mariah Carey (among many other talents).

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    Richard Drew / AP

    The 80th Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree is suspended by a crane in preparation to be raised at Rockefeller Center, on Nov. 14, in New York. The 80-foot Norway Spruce, donated by Joseph Balku, of Flanders, N.J., will be strung with 30,000 multi-colored, LEDs on 5 miles of wire, and topped with a Swarovski Crystal Star. The tree is scheduled to be lit during ceremonies Wednesday Nov. 28.

    Andrew Burton / Reuters

    The 2012 Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree is put in position by a crane and crew of workers outside Rockefeller Center in New York, on Nov. 14.

    John Moore / Getty Images

    Workers prepare the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree before standing it up on Nov. 14, in New York City.

    Richard Drew / AP

    The 80th Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree is suspended by a crane in preparation to be raised at Rockefeller Center, on Nov. 14, in New York.

    John Moore / Getty Images

    Workers prepare the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree before standing it up on Nov. 14, in New York City.

    John Moore / Getty Images

    Workers move the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree into position on Nov. 14, in New York City.

    Andrew Gombert / EPA

    A crane lifts the annual Rockefeller Center Christmas tree in New York City, on Nov. 14.

    A tree that survived Superstorm Sandy has been transported and set up at Rockefeller Center. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    6 comments

    Another question comes to mind... why did the owner let them cut the tree down in the first place? Must have offered him some serious money. I don't understand some people... a tree that survived a devastating hurricane and has lived for 80 years only to be "put to death" by chain saw. Boggles the m …

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    Explore related topics: christmas, us-news, christmas-tree, tree, rockefeller-center, featured
  • 8
    Oct
    2012
    2:06pm, EDT

    Tree stalker: Photographing a year in the life of a tree

    By Meredith Birkett and Jim Seida, NBC News

    "I drove by that tree for 19 years and never took a single frame of it,” photographer Mark Hirsch told NBC News.  The tree, a massive oak, is on his way home, along a country road in southwest Wisconsin.

    Mark Hirsch

    L to R: Jan. 20, Hirsch's first photo of the tree; March 14, still ten days before the official start of the project; Day 19, April 11

    But one day when a friend challenged Hirsch to try out the camera on his new iPhone 4S, he stopped his truck and trudged 500 yards through the snow to make his first picture of the tree (left frame, above). Surprised by the image quality - despite being used to professional gear – he showed the pictures to another friend who told him it could be a cool project if he did more.

    Mark Hirsch

    Day 184, Sept. 23

    Hirsch committed to taking a picture of the tree every day for a year and posted the images on Instagram and Facebook. Fast forward 190+ days and Mark Hirsch has captured seemingly every angle and every kind of light that could hit this tree which stands out from the surrounding cornfield. Doing so is not without effort, though. He’s woken his wife with the alarm clock to be ready for dawn light at 4:30 in the morning. On another day when the light just never seemed to get good, he jumped up mid-salad during dinner to take a picture when the sun finally broke through the clouds.

    Mark Hirsch

    Day 101, July 2

    As much as Hirsch depends upon good light to make beautiful images, he's not afraid of the dark. From Hirsch's Instagram feed: "During dusk one evening the lightning bugs were coming out and I wanted to capture their sporadic bursts of light. The iPhone camera really doesn't allow for times exposures so I utilized another app, SlowShutter, which essentially stacks video frames into a single image.  The resulting photo (above) doesn't have the sharp resolution of a still frame image but I think it produces an interesting effect regardless.

    There are days when Hirsch struggles to come up with something fresh. On those days, he tries a few tricks, like taking a different path toward the tree, or taking a closer look, which helped him discover a moth almost perfectly camouflaged against the bark. Or he'll lay down on his back and get a new perspective looking straight up. (below)

    Mark Hirsch

    Day 119, July 20

    Mark Hirsch

    Day 123, July 24

    “It’s kind of funny," Hirsch says, "If someone was off in a corner watching me they’d think I was some crazy guy because I’m all alone. It’s kind of my one on one time with this silly tree.”

    Hirsch is a professional photographer, doing both commercial and editorial work. Despite the occasionally stressful sprints home from his assignments to get a shot done before day’s end he says, “Those expeditions are actually some of the most relaxing and rewarding moments in my day.” Hirsch's German Wirehaired Pointer 'Magnum' (below) frequently and enthusiastically joins him on his photographic expeditions to the tree.

    Mark Hirsch

    Day 137, Aug. 7

    The social networking of Hirsch's project has fostered other connections as well.  Childhood friend Lora Kohnlein, who now lives in Henderson, Colo.,  found his project on Facebook and decided to pay a visit to the tree when she was visiting her hometown. From Hirsch's Instagram feed:  "...I had a fun time early this morning introducing Lora Kohnlein and her sons Duggan and Patrick to that tree. The boys and I climbed the tree, examined dozens of bugs and discussed the finer points of the video game angry birds. Thanks boys for inspiring me to see things like a kid again!"

    Mark Hirsch

    Day 111, July 2

    The massive tree, whose trunk Hirsch says is more than two grown men’s arm lengths around, is not as fixed as it might appear. Arable land in the area is in high demand because the price of corn is so high.  A bulldozer operator was working to expand some farmland nearby and asked the farm’s owner if he’d like the giant oak taken down too. The farmer, Tim Clare, replied, “That tree’s been there for over two hundred years.  I’m not the guy that’s gonna push it over.”

    Through the project, Hirsch has gained a new environmental awareness.“ I would not label myself an environmentalist, but I have always had a grand appreciation for the environment. My relationship with “that tree” has awakened a new-found vision, and appreciation for the fragility of our world and our need to embrace a more sustainable use of our resources.”

    Mark Hirsch

    Day 149, Aug. 19

    Mark Hirsch

    Day 71, June 2

    Hirsch has been surprised by the public appreciation of what is at its core, a simple idea. He has an exhibit currently showing in Dubuque. He hopes to publish a book. You can get near-daily updates on the “That Tree” Facebook page or by following @blockhouseroller on Instagram (both iPhone and Android).

    Share your photos of the changing seasons with NBCNews.com:

    1. In the caption (or a tweet), tell us briefly where the picture was taken and what is represents to you about the changing seasons.
    2. Tag your photo #NBCNewsPics in Instagram or Twitter.
    3. Or upload your photo in the box below.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    22 comments

    Even if they decide not to destroy that beautiful tree for the sake of genetically modified corn- if the bulldozer tears up and compacts enough of the root system it will still likely kill the old tree. Older trees have a more vulnerable immune system. If they tear up just a considerable portion of  …

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    Explore related topics: wisconsin, photography, tree, featured, instagram
  • 30
    Sep
    2012
    1:35pm, EDT

    Patrick Pleul / EPA

    Lone tree punctuates flowering field in Germany

    A chestnut tree on a yellow blossoming field is seen near Jacobsdorf, Germany, Sept. 30.

    Comment

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  • 31
    May
    2012
    7:01pm, EDT

    California environmentalists say logging a burned forest near Tahoe threatens rare woodpecker

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    A rare male black-backed woodpecker near its nest in a dead tree on the edge of where the Angora fire burned near South Lake Tahoe, Calif.

    AP reports that conservationists are pressing the US Forest Service to postpone cutting until after nesting season in August:

    “There are some other unlogged areas they could fly to as long as the nest core area was protected, but if that’s gone, the chicks would just starve to death,” said Rachel Fazio, a lawyer for the group who argued their case last May 14 before a three-judge panel at the federal appellate court in San Francisco.

    Fazio said it is ironic that the Forest Service and the Tahoe Institute for Natural Science are co-hosting the third annual Lake Tahoe Bird Festival on Saturday at the Taylor Creek Visitor Center just a few miles from the woodpeckers’ nest.

    Read more...

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    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    A sign warns hikers they are entering an area that is being cleared of dead trees burned in the 2007 Angora fire near South Lake Tahoe, Calif. Rare woodpecker chicks in burned forest stands at Lake Tahoe won't survive if the U.S. Forest Service proceeds with a contentious post-fire logging project, according to conservationists pressing the agency to postpone cutting around the trees until after the nesting season in August.

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    In this photo taken Monday, May 28, 2012, trees that have been cleared as part of a post-fire logging project are seen stacked for removal at the site of the 2007 Angora fire near South Lake Tahoe.

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    Chad Hanson, executive director of the John Muir Project, marks a tree, slated to be removed, that holds the nest and chicks of the rare black-backed woodpecker, at the site of the 2007 Angora fire near South Lake Tahoe.

    Comment

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  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    5:10am, EDT

    Fire crews called in after paratroopers get stuck in trees

    Lacey Fire District Three via AP

    An army paratrooper tangled in a tree on Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., on April 26, 2012. Lacey Fire District Three aided in the rescue of two paratroopers who were blown into trees during a training exercise.

    Lacey Fire District Three via AP

    Lacey Fire District Three's tall ladder being used to reach one of the trapped paratroopers.

    KING 5 News reports — Two Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM) paratroopers were back on solid ground Thursday evening after getting blown into trees during a training exercise.

    Lacey Fire District Three was called to the scene in Thurston County, Wash., by the JBLM Fire Department to assist with the rescue.  

    Army beefs up leadership at troubled Lewis-McChord base

    One paratrooper was safely pulled from a tree before the Lacey crews arrived. The second paratrooper was higher up in a tree and JBLM didn't have a ladder capable of reaching him. Lacey firefighters were able to get close enough with the ladder truck to rescue him.

    Both paratroopers are okay. 

    Video: NBC’s Miguel Almaguer reports on the troubled past of Joint Base Lewis-McChord

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Lacey Fire District Three via AP

    One of the paratroopers is helped to the ground.

    55 comments

    Glad to see both members of our military are safe. While a bit of a hassle and slightly embrassing, these troops will have a good story to tell, and pictures to prove it! Good to see both of them with their boots on the ground again.

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  • 6
    Apr
    2012
    2:26pm, EDT

    Japan's iconic cherry blossoms reach full bloom

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    A couple in a boat passes beneath cherry blossom trees along Imperial Palace Chidorigafuchi moats in Tokyo, Japan, on April 6. The Japan Meteorological Agency announced that blossoms of cherry trees are fully bloomed in Tokyo.

    Yuriko Nakao / Reuters

    Cherry blossoms in full bloom are seen in Kawasaki, near Tokyo on April 6. Spring has begun in Japan with the blooming of the country's beloved cherry trees, with revelers eager to use the occasion as a way to break from a year marked by crisis and disaster.

    Franck Robichon / EPA

    A cherry blossom is seen lying on a cherry tree roots at the Yasukuni Shrine precincts in Tokyo, Japan, on April 6. The Japan Meteorological Agency announced that blossoms of cherry trees are fully bloomed in Tokyo.

    Love cherry blossoms? Check out...

    • Along with blossoms, a cacophony of cameras

    Slideshow: National Cherry Blossom Festival's 100th anniversary

    Karen Bleier / AFP - Getty Images

    This year marks 100 years since the gift of 3,000 cherry trees from Tokyo Mayor Yukio Ozaki to Washington, D.C.

    Launch slideshow

     

    1 comment

    Awesome!!!!

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  • 22
    Mar
    2012
    12:57am, EDT

    Tree in Germany blooms 10,000 Easter eggs

    Stefan Thomas / EPA

    Volker Kraft decorates his Easter egg tree in Saalfeld, Germany on Wednesday, March 21, 2012. It takes the family around two weeks to hang the 10,000 hand painted eggs into the tree.

     

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    1 comment

    That is wonderful. Apparently 10K is the capacity: “There will be no increase because I do not have storage capacity anymore,” the 76-year-old retiree says. “I would have to sleep with the eggs otherwise.”

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  • 12
    Feb
    2012
    11:35am, EST

    Mukesh Gupta / Reuters

    Girls walk beneath a row of parched tress on a winter day in the outskirts of Jammu, India, Feb. 12.

    Towering trees frame a walk on a winter's day

    .

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  • 9
    Jan
    2012
    6:02am, EST

    Peter Parks / AFP - Getty Images

    Workers trim branches on trees on a street in Shanghai on Jan. 9, 2012.

    Shanghai trees trimmed

    Comment

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  • 12
    Nov
    2011
    9:33pm, EST

    Arnd Wiegmann / Reuters

    A boy plays under a tree during sunny autumn weather in the town of Winterthur, Switzerland, Nov. 12.

    Tree full of autumn leaves provides some fun in Switzerland

    .

    1 comment

    The little sod is trying to snap the tree branch with his feet....hardly "playing under a tree". But I guess that wouldn't have sounded so appealing. Nice colors though.....

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Natalia Jimenez is a multimedia editor at NBCNews.com. She was previously a photo editor at the Star-Ledger in Newark, N.J.

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