Find the word definition

Crossword clues for forestland

Wiktionary
forestland

n. Land covered by trees, forests, woodlands.

Wikipedia
Forestland (festival)

Forestland is an electronic dance music festival that takes place in Međimurje County, Croatia. It has received media coverage and is one of Croatia's most popular electronic music events.

Usage examples of "forestland".

Jackson and Michael Ryan of the University of Texas at Austin suggested that a mystery meteorite which leveled hundreds of square kilometers of Siberian forestland in 1908 was, in fact, a black hole.

The forestland was certainly fertile enough to support a village of this size.

The Ocalidad Mountain Range that guarded the northern coasts of the forestland now called Wollendan had been infamous for its bandits long before the blond seafarers of the coast migrated through its passes to carve out cities from the great forests of the south.

But he was aware of her when she returned, for he had shoved the tome aside in irreverent frustration to stare gloomily at the blue skies and green forestland without.

They slogged out of a heavy stretch of mud-soaked grasses and reeds and climbed an embankment to what seemed to be an island in the midst of the swamp, a low forestland amid the damp.

It was an unpleasant sight among the lush forestland, and Fender wondered what could have caused such destruction.

Meanwhile, the Rillyti had encircled their camp with ever growing numbers, until Kane was forced to break for the forestlands before the batrachian hordes decided to attack.

Paranor at midnight, flying north out of the Druid forestlands with a full moon to light their way, riding the edge of their expectations just ahead of their doubts and fears.

They worked the tanneries and the armories, assisted the blacksmiths, chopped and hauled wood, built huts, broke virgin forestland to the plow, sowed and tended fields, and hauled water from the stream.

When the reunion finally concluded the company resumed its journey, moving away from the Chamals and into the forestlands north.

It was as if a new birth, with stronger assimilations than the first, had converted the forestland, still so uncongenial to every other pilgrim and wanderer, into Hester Prynne’s wild and dreary, but life-long home.

Panoramic views spread away to either side, the sweep of the national forestlands and parkways slipping past in breathtaking still life.