Internet Culture

Google+ has a thing for trees

Before Gratuitous Picture of Yourself Wednesday, there’s Google+’s less-self-absorbed weekly ritual: Tree Tuesday.

Photo of Miles Klee

Miles Klee

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To many, Google+ is less of a social media platform than a nuisance that seeks to invade the experience of using any of Google’s more successful tools. What lies beyond these bothersome and confusing notifications? An arboretum, apparently.

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While Tumblr has Gratuitous Picture of Yourself Wednesday (GPOYW), and Twitter has #VinDieselSunday, Google+ has developed a weekly ritual neither so absurd nor self-absorbed: #TreeTuesday. You don’t have to be funny or rationalize a selfie: Just post a photo of a tree.

Any tree will do, though #TreeTuesday often puts special emphasis on the tallest, oldest, or just plain weird-looking specimens. It’s also an opportunity to see how natural vegetation varies across the country and the globe. Pines and palms, oaks and maples all mingle as one digital forest.

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Currently, Tree Tuesday has a community page followed by about 8,500 users, and it, too, seems based in a simple affection for nature:

Welcome to the #TreeTuesday community! Tree Tuesday is a photo theme curated by Christina Lawrie & +Shannon S. Myers.

Share your love of trees by posting your own images to your stream with the hashtag #TreeTuesday and mention Christina and Shannon. (This helps us to find your posts)

Plenty of users have done just that, offering leafy close-ups and examinations of gnarled bark. “Who doesn’t love a good tree?” is the clear consensus, especially as some posts lament the cutting down of local favorites.

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Indeed, the subtext to much of #TreeTuesday is an increased respect for our oxygen-giving neighbors. We are reminded of their perfect shade, their climbability, and their romantic associations. Their crucial role in our imperiled ecosystem is a frequent topic.

It’s an odd symbol for a tech-driven society, but the humble, fragile, life-giving tree takes on a still greater beauty in the 21st century. Contrary to rigid, cookie-cutter forms, the tree is a triumph of free-form design, twisting and growing in accordance with its environment rather than in opposition to it. Humanity could stand to take that lesson.

H/T BuzzFeed | Photo by Moyan_Brenn/Flickr

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