The only urban areas you can find that high of a tree to person ratio are the decaying rustbelt hell-holes like Cleveland and detroit where nature is slowly reclaiming the crumbling infrastructure after all the productive members of society fled to the suburbs.
I just hope urbanites' hatred of everything wholesome keeps them in their concrete prisons so they cant spread their rot.
Here in the Southeast, there are trees everywhere that people haven't cut them down. That means that although there is a high level of development within the cities/suburbs, there are still a lot of trees in between everything. Easily 1 per person.
Some other places, trees only grow where people plant and water them. And then people complain there's not a lot of trees, and I'm like: nature doesn't create forests in this environment. The natural environment is shoulder-high grass with occasional clusters of trees.
The only urban areas you can find that high of a tree to person ratio are the decaying rustbelt hell-holes like Cleveland and detroit where nature is slowly reclaiming the crumbling infrastructure after all the productive members of society fled to the suburbs.
I just hope urbanites' hatred of everything wholesome keeps them in their concrete prisons so they cant spread their rot.
Here in the Southeast, there are trees everywhere that people haven't cut them down. That means that although there is a high level of development within the cities/suburbs, there are still a lot of trees in between everything. Easily 1 per person.
Some other places, trees only grow where people plant and water them. And then people complain there's not a lot of trees, and I'm like: nature doesn't create forests in this environment. The natural environment is shoulder-high grass with occasional clusters of trees.