Over the course of about 4 years Geyer has been recording free standing trees in the Black Forest in southern Germany, where the artist grew up and experienced her own queer formation. Over the course of her fascination with the lone trees, shaped often by other trees that had been cut down as part of agricultural forestry, she learned that her muses were left standing to support the growth of saplings planted around them. Recent research by Dr. Susan Simard and others has discovered that trees form a symbiotic relationships to fungi. They grow branching threads from the tip of a tree root to connect to roots of other trees of their own kind and others growing around them creating an expansive underground network. These networks can share nutrition and other life saving information. The trees the artist had intuitively documented are literally mother trees sharing breath and live with their surroundings.