Postkort fra 2046: The Forest Network

The Forest Network hit three million sensors this spring. Hikers mount them on trees when they pass through—temperature, humidity, soil moisture, CO₂, even microphone arrays for birdsong. Takes two minutes, costs nothing, data goes straight to the open forest platform.
Every woodland in Denmark has real-time health metrics now. Mushroom hunters know exact fruiting windows down to the grove. Forestry departments cite our data more than their own surveys. Kids track fox families moving between Gribskov and Dyrehaven.
No one owns it. No ads, no app trying to sell you hiking boots. Just thousands of people who wanted to know their forests better.
Lars complains the sensors "ruin the wilderness experience." He's installed forty-seven of them. Checks the network every morning before his walk.
Started in Rold Skov when someone wondered why the old-growth pockets were thriving while newer sections struggled. Turns out forests talk when you give them microphones and moisture sensors.
People are pretty good at taking care of things when you give them the tools and get out of the way.
— Igor, 2046
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