Once found in a pine forest in northeastern Germany, the forest swastika was a planted patch of larch trees that in autumn became a bright yellow swastika, a stark contrast to the dark green of the surrounding pine trees. Nobody knows how the trees came to be planted in the forest. Some speculations include that residents planted them in 1937 to prove their fidelity to the Nazi regime after a local businessman had been shipped to a concentration camp; while another states it was the work of a zealous forester. In any case, once the image was discovered in 1992 aerial photographs by the newly reunified German government, a majority of the larch trees were cut down to obscure the image. Unfortunately, Google Earth's capture of the forest wasn't during the correct season for the new, less swastika formation to be visible.
Previous Image: pengtagramkazakhstan
Next Image: swastikatreesgermany
Respond to this

