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Vertical Framed Premium Gallery Wrap Canvas - The thick Sierra Palm and bromeliads forest in El Yunque rainforest PR

Vertical Framed Premium Gallery Wrap Canvas - The thick Sierra Palm and bromeliads forest in El Yunque rainforest PR

Regular price $52.01 USD
Regular price Sale price $52.01 USD
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Bring an authentic rainforest experience to your bedroom, hallways, home or office. Connect with Nature every day!

Ideal for the office, business, hospital or church that wants to impress its employees, members, visitors or clients.

These canvas with high quality print will always look as tight and flat as the day they were made. Every frame is built with a solid face to support the canvas and prevent deforming.
.: 100% Cotton fabric

.: Recycled plastic frame

.: High image quality and detail
.: For indoor use

About our forest wall canvas prints:

The thick Sierra Palm and bromeliads forest in El Yunque rainforest PR.
The fallen tree is a decaying Sierra Palm tree.

Note: This photo was taken before Hurricane Maria.

History:
El Yunque, officially named 'El Yunque National Forest'
(EYNF) is located in northeastern Puerto Rico.
It is the only tropical rainforest in the US National
Park System (NPS) and is managed by the US Forest Service.
It covers a surface of 28,430 acres (115 km2).
It is the largest forest in Puerto Rico.

EYNF was stablished in 1903 by the beginning USFS,
but initially it was set aside in 1876 by King Alfonso XII
of Spain and represents one of the oldest reserves in the
Western Hemisphere. Before that it was revered by the
Taino Indians as a Holy land as 'Yuke'or white land.

Canvas Prints:
We 1st used Canon cameras, then Nikon 24MP cameras 
at maximum resolution. We covered all roads and trails
of the forest and some deep regions in over 40 days of
explorations of the forest and collected over 10K images.
In 2019 we started using the Nikon D850 with 45MP.

Many of our canvas prints have dates, this is because their
purpose was to be a scientific record of the EYNF at that
place and time. Now that Hurricane Maria has decimated
the forest, it remains a record of how EYNF was after
the natural growth with no major hurricanes in 100 years.


By Raul Garcia
Forest explorer



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