Imagine floating through the cosmos, dodging asteroid-sized apples, and landing on a planet covered in fluorescent blue grass.

Marrakech – What if nature, as we know it on Earth, flourished in space? Not just the occasional stubborn weed growing in a space station lab — but full-blown forests, rivers, and wildlife suspended in zero gravity.

Forget traditional landscaping — gravity is so last century. In a universe where nature exists in space, trees wouldn’t grow upwards but in every possible direction, twisting like cosmic spaghetti. 

Vines would slither through asteroid belts, and imagine a jungle of floating mangos, gently bobbing through the void, waiting to be plucked by a hungry astronaut.

If nature thrives in space, it wouldn’t just be about plants — animals would have adapted too. 

Picture celestial whales gliding through nebulae, their bioluminescent skin glowing like deep-sea creatures. 

Birds might evolve to have wing-flaps that propel them through the vacuum, navigating the Milky Way like a personal highway. And let’s not even start on space bees—pollinating alien flowers with star dust? Iconic.

If nature had a say in space design, planets could become massive fruit bowls. 

Imagine Saturn’s rings being made of citrus slices, or a comet leaving behind a trail of fizzy soda instead of ice and rock. 

The Milky Way? A real river of actual milk (or oat milk, for the lactose-intolerant intergalactic travelers).

Water might not pour from clouds, but it could exist in orbs floating like jellyfish, waiting to be sipped. 

Instead of rainforests, we’d have “nebula forests” where gaseous clouds nourish bizarre space-fungi and glowing star-petals. 

Instead of thunderstorms, electromagnetic storms would light up the sky in neon flashes, like a never-ending cosmic disco.

Would it even be a good idea?

While a space jungle sounds fun, imagine the hazards. Space pollen? Good luck dealing with intergalactic allergies. 

A rogue tree branch floating into your spaceship’s control panel? Not ideal. 

And let’s not forget cosmic predators — because if nature has taught us anything, it’s that where there’s an ecosystem, there’s something waiting to eat you.

Still, a universe where nature exists in space sounds a lot better than one filled with empty, lifeless rock. 

Who knows? Maybe one day, when humanity colonizes the stars, we’ll take a bit of Earth with us — seeding new worlds with forests, rivers, and the occasional stubborn dandelion pushing its way through the stardust.