The wood is actually that color but I don't know why. It's my hypothesis that 
is has something to do with the color of the ground the tree grew in because as 
far as I could tell, the trees growing in white ground didn't have any color in 
the wood.
--
Brian

On Jun 27, 2012, at 7:59 AM, Bruce Johnson wrote:

> 
> On Jun 26, 2012, at 4:59 PM, Brian Lawson wrote:
> 
>> Taken last week in the Twisted Forest, a Bristlecone Pine forest at the top 
>> of the Ashdown Gorge and along the edge of Cedar Breaks.
>> <http://brianspics.wittybanter.org/ThereAndBack/TwistedForest/index.html>
> 
> Wow, love the line of bristlecones. 
> 
> And in 'Dead Wood', where you're talking about the wood color is that 
> reflected light coloring or is the wood actually colored by the ground it's 
> in?
> 
> -- 
> Bruce Johnson
> 
> "Wherever you go, there you are" B. Banzai,  PhD
> 
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