For generations, old-growth forests more than a millennium old were treated not as remarkable communities where incalculable, sentient inner-connections existed between individual species, but rather big trees were treated like corn, commodities harvested without pondering their living essence as more than board feet. Photo of Idaho cedar grove by Todd Wilkinson
For generations, old-growth forests more than a millennium old were treated not as remarkable communities where incalculable, sentient inner-connections existed between individual species, but rather big trees were treated like corn, commodities harvested without pondering their living essence as more than board feet. Photo of Idaho cedar grove by Todd Wilkinson