If the tree is 6 or 7 blocks tall, the additional 1 or 2 rows at the bottom are also just a log. The fifth and sixth (bottom) rows contain no leaves, only the log in the center.The fourth row generates with the same rules like the third and thus has a minimum of 20 and a maximum of 24 leaf blocks.These corners are randomly filled with between 0 and 4 leaves, although having all four filled is rare. One can think of this as a 5×5 space where every block is leaves except the four corners. Those 8 leaf blocks are also surrounded orthogonally, for an additional 12 leaf blocks. The third row has the log in the middle, surrounded orthogonally and diagonally by leaf blocks.Diagonal leaf blocks grow from a minimum of 1 and a maximum of 3 corners of the log. The second row is the top of the trunk and also has 4 leaves adjacent to it.The topmost row is one above the height of the tree and always has exactly 5 leaves: one above the log and four orthogonally adjacent to it, forming a + shape. The growth pattern, in detail, is as follows: The transparent leaves represent areas where leaves may grow, but do not always. The leaf distributions are shown visually above, each table cell representing one 'slice' of the tree viewed from above. Birch trees always grow around 50 to 60 leaves.
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