A towering oak tree in the middle of a grassy soccer field in Estonia was named the European Tree of the Year after 200,000 people cast their votes in February.
A towering oak tree in the middle of a grassy soccer field in Estonia was named European Tree of the Year after 200,000 people cast their votes in February.
The 150-year-old oak offers shade to football teams competing in Saare County that have learned how to use the tree to complete passes.
In 1951 the town of Orisaree enlarged a small sports field incorporating the mighty oak into its playing area.
"This contest really joined people together and made us all feel the importance of trees for our community," said Heiki Hanso, coordinator of the contest in Estonia.
The European Tree of the Year contest was launched in 2011 by the Environmental Partnership Association as a fun way to highlight the significance of old trees in the natural and cultural heritage of all countries in Europe. Check out some other winning trees below.
On the banks of the Old Lake of Tata, a sycamore tree has guarded the castle gate for 230 years. Along with several others, the tree was brought from Versailles by a member of the Esterházy family. If it could speak the old plane would fill several books with stories about friendships, loves and artists inspired by the great sycamores. "Author Mátyás Pribojszky wrote the story of the Sycamore King, after he regained his writing skills thanks to the tree," according to the contest entry. Sycamore trees (sometimes called plane trees) can reach ages of five hundred to six hundred years
The tree became a symbol of Polish identity, paying homage to those who fought for centuries against the Germanization of the Silesia region. The tree dates back to the Silesian Piast dynasty symbolized by the patriotic name Slav.
The tree stands in the village of Dębina (meaning oak forest) whose inhabitants cherish it as a living symbol of their local community.
The Old Elm in Sliven, Bulgaria is a beloved symbol standing directly in the city square. It is a centuries-old silent witness of the Sliven's turbulent and heroic past and its modern day parades and protests. The tree is featured on the city's coat of arms and will remain a historic marker for generations to come.
The Plane tree in Heves county, Hungary is among several remarkable tree species that thrive in the unique environs of the Eger thermal spa that promotes fast growth.
A local myth describes a scene from 1552, during the successfully defended Turkish attack against the Eger castle, in which the Turkish army was directed from beneath this Eastern Sycamore. This tree, however, was planted in the 18th century when Karoly Eszterhazy was bishop of the city.
Photos courtesy of European Tree of the Year; Top photo by Elina Kalm
A valley in Bulgaria's mountains, for decades known for making AK-47 rifles, now has blossomed into a supplier of organic rose oil for beauty products, reviving a centuries' old industry. Every morning at dawn hundreds of villagers hustle through fields of rose bushes to pick fresh blooms still damp with morning dew.
Hours before the ousted president of Tunisia fled, a pilot about to fly to Lyons from Tunisia refused to obey an order to hold the aircraft and take members of the president's family on board.
Having endured the tumult of their own revolution, Tunisians have traveled from far and wide to serve food and bring supplies to refugee camps along the Libyan border. Generosity and compassion, they say, are part of the spirit of their revolution.
A man credited as a hero of Tunisia's revolution, Gen. Rachid Ammar, has been promoted to chief of the nation's armed forces. Ammar is treated as a hero in this North African nation, credited by the press with refusing to obey orders of then-President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali to shoot on crowds of demonstrators.
Today marks the start of a landmark election campaign, the first in Tunisia since the revolt in January that toppled a dictator and inspired similar movements in Egypt and Libya.
In Tunisia, following the first free election after the overthrow of the former dictatorship, the Islamist Ennahda Party that won 40 percent of the seats announced it would form a coalition government with one of the secular progressive parties and promised to recognize the rights of all citizens, women, men, religious and non-religious.
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