cameoappearance:jumpingjacktrash:the45thpresidentialruger:Never talk to me or my 42 trees againit am
cameoappearance:jumpingjacktrash:the45thpresidentialruger:Never talk to me or my 42 trees againit amuses me to see people being surprised/impressed/amused by this setup, because it’s extremely common on the plains. if you don’t plant a windbreak, your heating and cooling bills are huge, and storms do things like throw the lawnmower through the living room window, take the roof off, or cake the entire north side of the house with six inches of solid ice.evergreens remain bendy even in the coldest weather, so – wait, no, not the coldest. i remember when i was a kid it got down to like -45 and the norway pines around my house were cracking like gunshots as the sap froze.maples, incidentally, make that noise around -20f, and i hear it at least once every winter here in southern minnesota. but i only ever heard norway pines make it that one time.so anyway that’s why we plant pine trees around our houses. because otherwise the wind would freaking kill us.This is informative and perfectly sensible under the circumstances but I also cannot resist the temptation to compare it to planting stuff all around the boundary of your lot in The Sims -- source link