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Robert,We'll be looking forwards to your continuing adventures!cheersfermi
Getting on for 20 thousand people have already read these pages, Robert, so I think you can be sure that you are doing well with your information and reports!
Robert,Some of the 20k followers may be people like registered several times!Another nice outing. It is interesting to see the flora of the acidic soil. We have plenty of that kind of soil here but the flora is meager.
Robert, it is good to read your forays into the wild. We only have two Arctostaphylos species here, A. alpina (an un-common upland plant) and A. uva-ursi. Both these are prostrate shrubs.
Trond,Yes, I have noticed your comments about acidic soils in Norway, however I am puzzled by the lack of diversity in species. Is this true in other northern areas such as Alaska, Siberia, or even Finland? I just do not know! I have read about what happened to the flora in Iceland or even the diversity of grasses in California.
. . . . .I know that you are very busy, however when you get a chance I would like to know if there are any relic species that survived the Ice age(s) in Norway? From your last response I take it that Norway was more or less completely covered with glaciers during the Ice Age. We had our glaciers during the last Ice Age (mostly in the mountains), but there was plenty of nearby land that was ice free. There appears to be a fair number of relic species in California too.