All the forests in ND are along the Canadian border. The rest of the state looks like a mix between rolling prairie and desolate wasteland. Western part of the state actually has cacti, and a Venn diagram of white supremacists, ranchers, oil people.
It’s too bad wind isn’t a tourist attraction because ND would be #1 by a longshot.
It is a strange place.
Freedom-Fromme on
I’m proud of the fact I live in the most heavily forested state in the country
BeeMovieEnjoyer on
Growing up in Maine and then visiting North Dakota was a wild experience. Felt like I stepped into an apocalypse
OcotilloWells on
I would have thought Alaska would be more.
pkupku on
I’m skeptical about Nevada. Yes the Sierra Nevada at the far western strip is heavily forested. But I expect that a lot of “forest” outside of that is pretty sparse.
Rabidschnautzu on
Nevada has a higher proportion of forest than Illinois? Yeah, this is bullshit.
Libertarian_2020 on
Let’s see the “Land covered by FARMLAND in each U.S. state!”
FrozenChihuahua on
Fun fact: if the Upper Peninsula of Michigan was a state then it would be 3rd place with percentage of forest area at 83%.
larsloli on
Okay. Now account for how much beetle kill off is in those forests out west and it drops by 50%
plantgirlproblems on
Yet another redeeming quality of Alabama
Donatter on
A) the world of maps, is a very suspect site/group that uses false, manipulated, half-true data to fit whatever narrative or agenda they wish to present with a specific map, alongside omitting data that doesn’t fit said agenda or narrative, or simply not showing exactly what questions they asked to what group of people, or how many people they asked, in order to again, force a specific narrative or agenda (also to largely farm engagement, karma, likes, retweets, views, etc on various social media platforms)
B) to reiterate older comments of mine
“op is a regular poster (karma/engagement farmer) of disinformation/misinformation or just straight up propaganda in this and many other subs. (A lot of it being Russian propaganda, or just pro Russian and/or anti American)
They also tend to use very suspicious, out of date, false, manipulated, and/or misleading maps and sources for said maps.
For the purpose of engagement/karma farming, and spreading disinformation, misinformation, distrust, division, etc in targeted groups against targeted groups.
As I say every time I catch one of their posts, report both the account and post for spam and/or violating the subs and websites guidelines”
plantgirlproblems on
Do North Dakotans hate forests? Are they stupid? /s
Necessary-Luck-5927 on
Georgia’s percent so tuff
Troubador222 on
I’m surprised at 16% in Nevada.
AuntiLou on
Now I’m curious what’s qualified as “forest”.
Appsoul on
What’s up with middle America?? I’d sssume they’d have the most
Hot-Abs143 on
Another reason to love New England 🌲
AleksandrNevsky on
Gotta pump those numbers up
Badfish1060 on
A lot of people don’t realize most of Alabama is forest with scattered small communities.
camcaine2575 on
Growing up and currently living in Mississippi, looking around outside, I am not surprised that over half is forested.
TheHaphazardHosta on
Nice. These are the types of random maps I follow this sub for
Odd-Masterpiece7304 on
Damn California. Has anybody told you about the environment?
mattisfamous1982 on
Woohoo, Alabama
KnottyGorillas on
There is now way Texas has more forest coverage than Colorado or even NM for that matter. TX is the most desolate dry desert hell scape I have ever been in. I guess if you count mesquite it might have 5% forest.
cessiecat on
So that’s why living in Illinois has been so depressing.
TheUnknown-Writer on
New England bc its industrial power failed after Civil War.
Alabama and W. Virginia never did. The great plains just dont have fckn trees
JimboyXL on
Maine won.
DogPrestidigitator on
Would like to see a map of same thing but 100 years earlier. I’m sure the amount of forests would be considerably less, esp. in the eastern US. 100 years ago, there were still more people living on small farms then there were people living in cities, and many homes were heated by wood.
Complex-Place6430 on
I’m calling bull sht
Extreme_Bit_1135 on
I would have sworn Washington and Oregon were more forested but it’s only the western part of those states. The eastern part is semi-arid.
Just-Ad-4193 on
Who’d of thunk, Arizona 26 percent 🤔
El_Picaflor215 on
PA ❤️
ifdisdendat on
disappointed in the garden state
Democrat_maui on
“We’ll double America’s forest growth, protect every acre, prepare for Anthropocene by ending bigoil’s grip, building a thermal-energy future.” Hart ‘28 Dem Pursuing.com 🇺🇸🙏
Traditional-Ad-8737 on
I thought for sure NH had the most forested area,even vs Maine
hawk37291 on
Interesting
Traditional_Sir_4503 on
I find it amazing that New York State has a 10-14 percentage points advantage over Washington State and Oregon.
And while I might be fascinated for a bit, I think I’d hate living in those yellow and light green states in the middle and left side of the map.
CMT_FLICKZ1928 on
New England❤️💚🤍
penelo-rig on
Everywhere is just about as I would expect, probably with the exception of 1) AZ. While I do know Arizona does have a surprising amount of forest, I never would’ve guessed it was more than a quarter of the state. The opposite is true for2) IL. I know Illinois has been deforested substantially for agriculture, but I never would have guessed it was this bad.
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All the forests in ND are along the Canadian border. The rest of the state looks like a mix between rolling prairie and desolate wasteland. Western part of the state actually has cacti, and a Venn diagram of white supremacists, ranchers, oil people.
It’s too bad wind isn’t a tourist attraction because ND would be #1 by a longshot.
It is a strange place.
I’m proud of the fact I live in the most heavily forested state in the country
Growing up in Maine and then visiting North Dakota was a wild experience. Felt like I stepped into an apocalypse
I would have thought Alaska would be more.
I’m skeptical about Nevada. Yes the Sierra Nevada at the far western strip is heavily forested. But I expect that a lot of “forest” outside of that is pretty sparse.
Nevada has a higher proportion of forest than Illinois? Yeah, this is bullshit.
Let’s see the “Land covered by FARMLAND in each U.S. state!”
Fun fact: if the Upper Peninsula of Michigan was a state then it would be 3rd place with percentage of forest area at 83%.
Okay. Now account for how much beetle kill off is in those forests out west and it drops by 50%
Yet another redeeming quality of Alabama
A) the world of maps, is a very suspect site/group that uses false, manipulated, half-true data to fit whatever narrative or agenda they wish to present with a specific map, alongside omitting data that doesn’t fit said agenda or narrative, or simply not showing exactly what questions they asked to what group of people, or how many people they asked, in order to again, force a specific narrative or agenda (also to largely farm engagement, karma, likes, retweets, views, etc on various social media platforms)
B) to reiterate older comments of mine
“op is a regular poster (karma/engagement farmer) of disinformation/misinformation or just straight up propaganda in this and many other subs. (A lot of it being Russian propaganda, or just pro Russian and/or anti American)
They also tend to use very suspicious, out of date, false, manipulated, and/or misleading maps and sources for said maps.
For the purpose of engagement/karma farming, and spreading disinformation, misinformation, distrust, division, etc in targeted groups against targeted groups.
As I say every time I catch one of their posts, report both the account and post for spam and/or violating the subs and websites guidelines”
Do North Dakotans hate forests? Are they stupid? /s
Georgia’s percent so tuff
I’m surprised at 16% in Nevada.
Now I’m curious what’s qualified as “forest”.
What’s up with middle America?? I’d sssume they’d have the most
Another reason to love New England 🌲
Gotta pump those numbers up
A lot of people don’t realize most of Alabama is forest with scattered small communities.
Growing up and currently living in Mississippi, looking around outside, I am not surprised that over half is forested.
Nice. These are the types of random maps I follow this sub for
Damn California. Has anybody told you about the environment?
Woohoo, Alabama
There is now way Texas has more forest coverage than Colorado or even NM for that matter. TX is the most desolate dry desert hell scape I have ever been in. I guess if you count mesquite it might have 5% forest.
So that’s why living in Illinois has been so depressing.
New England bc its industrial power failed after Civil War.
Alabama and W. Virginia never did. The great plains just dont have fckn trees
Maine won.
Would like to see a map of same thing but 100 years earlier. I’m sure the amount of forests would be considerably less, esp. in the eastern US. 100 years ago, there were still more people living on small farms then there were people living in cities, and many homes were heated by wood.
I’m calling bull sht
I would have sworn Washington and Oregon were more forested but it’s only the western part of those states. The eastern part is semi-arid.
Who’d of thunk, Arizona 26 percent 🤔
PA ❤️
disappointed in the garden state
“We’ll double America’s forest growth, protect every acre, prepare for Anthropocene by ending bigoil’s grip, building a thermal-energy future.” Hart ‘28 Dem Pursuing.com 🇺🇸🙏
I thought for sure NH had the most forested area,even vs Maine
Interesting
I find it amazing that New York State has a 10-14 percentage points advantage over Washington State and Oregon.
And while I might be fascinated for a bit, I think I’d hate living in those yellow and light green states in the middle and left side of the map.
New England❤️💚🤍
Everywhere is just about as I would expect, probably with the exception of 1) AZ. While I do know Arizona does have a surprising amount of forest, I never would’ve guessed it was more than a quarter of the state. The opposite is true for2) IL. I know Illinois has been deforested substantially for agriculture, but I never would have guessed it was this bad.