Is there a term for a gathering of trees in an open field?
Is there a term for a gathering of trees in an open field?
How about “copse” (a small group of trees)
Copse was my initial thought, but there is also the word Spinney.
A copse, as the name suggests, is a stand of trees that have been deliberately coppiced (ie, repeatedly cut near the base so that the rootstock remains alive and generates fresh branches at ground level).
A better term might be the more generic “stand”.
Came here for grove.
One of the surnames on my mom’s side of the family means “grove of pines near a bog” and comes from the same area as my best friend’s surname that means “evil bog goblin”
I like to think that his family was evil bog spirits, and my family were good tree people, and he and I have mended the feud.
This has nothing to do with OP’s question, I just thought of it when grove came up, and thought I’d share.
Totally pointless tangent: looking up “copse” on the Galnet translation dictionary (free, offline, fdroid) the Deutsch word is dickicht
…totally appropriate loanword to steal IMO. Adventure… linguistically!
Etymology:
www.etymonline.com/word/thicket#etymonline_v_1075…
thicket (n.)
“close-set growth of shrubs, bushes, trees, etc.; tangled coppice or grove,” late Old English þiccet, from þicce in the sense of “dense, growing close together” (see thick (adj.)) + denominative suffix -et. Absent in Middle English, reappearing early 16c., perhaps a dialectal survival or a re-formation.