The second photo is of an Mackintosh Apple tree in my side yard backed up by the same evergreen.
This third photo is obviously my front deck bird feeder. The ice gives it a Chinese pagoda look to me.
The next photo is a general photo of a part of my eight acres behind my old country home. You can note that the ice has built up on all of the trees in the area.
This photo shows the resiliency of a white birch tree. The ice can weight it down, but it will bend until its top touches the ground before it snaps. When the ice melts it returns to its original shape none the worse for wear. In the meantime it makes for some interesting patterns.
This larger birch tips almost unbelievably with the weight of the accumulated ice, but it remains in the upright position. This one probably will not return to its former upright status.
Here is a shot of a long-needle pine. It looks rather bedraggled with its ice coated long needles bearing a heavy load. The pines, unlike the birches, will snap long before they will bend to the ground. This one was nearing its weight bearing capacity, but luckily it held until it thawed.
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