The Magic World of Pine Trees 3

The Adventure Continues

Watch the movie  Order DVD

The Pine Movie guys did it again! This is the best movie of the year. It's all about pines, the sea and cool breeze. Can't wait for the next sequel!

Roger Treeberg in New York Times

For two years our crew travelled all around the world to explore and film pine trees. From snow covered pine trees of northern Canada to silky pine needles of Namibian desert, pine trees grow and survive for hundreds of years. They bare the witness of coming and passing of human civilizations and climate cycles of the Earth.

Label

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

Clips and photos

Climbing the tallest pine tree in the world.

Nothing smells better than enchanted pine forest...

...except pine trees on the Meditearean cost.

Eskimos keep warm with strong pine needles tea. 

Pine trees stand and watch days passing by.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

But throughout all these changes, pine trees keep smelling the same. That sweet oily scent was enjoyed by our ancestors before they could even walk, by Eskimo farmers of Greenland’s summer age and by people of our time while enjoying their well earned holidays, lying in pine shadows, listening to crickets.

Did you know?

There are more pine trees than humans in the world. There are 100 pine trees per person in Siberian forests alone. It is very likely that eventual extraterrestrial visitors will consider pine trees the true owners of the Earth.

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter featuring top pine trees from all corners of the globe.

Subscribe