Ever seen a cross on top of a pine tree? No, not the wooden kind. Around Easter each spring, some species in certain regions start to develop shoots with a familiar shape. This sighting has led to a popular legend that pine trees "know" when it's Easter.
"If you look at the tops of the pine trees two weeks before [Easter], you will see the yellow shoots," the blog A Lighthouse recounts. "As the days get closer to Easter Sunday, the tallest shoot will branch off and form a cross. By the time Easter Sunday comes around, you will see that most of the pine trees will have small yellow crosses on all of the tallest shoots."
While it's true that these "crosses" appear in late March or early April for most of the country, the inspirational story linking them to the Christian holiday is just that—a story (albeit a lovely one).
Amy Enfield, Ph.D., consumer horticulturist at ScottsMiracle-Gro tells CountryLiving.com:

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Still, believers might enjoy spotting the shoots every season and interpreting them as a sign of the religious celebrations to come.
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Taysha Murtaugh was the Lifestyle Editor at CountryLiving.com.
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