![]() ![]() ![]() “Sadly, the artists in the movie can put a sycamore leaf on an oak bark tree and you’re like ‘Oh, that’s going to be hard to make that work,’ ” Bishop says. Imagineers used scenes from 1937’s “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” for inspiration, even though the Disney classic didn’t worry too much about being horticulturally correct. They’re double-, triple-welded so there wouldn’t’ be any chance of anything flying off or injuries,” she says. The trees, placed by a crane, are an engineering feat, Bishop says. There are 350 fake shrubs amid 20,000 real ones on the mountain’s base and 55 synthetic trees versus 150 live oaks, cedars and birches. Other not-so-natural sights on the Mine Train site: poppies, shrubs and trees. “We folded it over so it kind of hid - what I call the hairpiece, the toupee - the base that the grasses are in.” “We were able to use a heat gun and we melted the grass,” Bishop says. ![]()
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