Otonabee Conservation To Plant Over 30,000 Trees For National Forest Week

Otonabee Conservation is celebrating National Forest Week by planting over 30,000 trees and shrubs this fall season.

Photo courtesy of Otonabee Conservation.

National Forest Week from Sept. 18-24 encourages Canadians to learn more about forest heritage and increases awareness about the value of forests as a fundamental part of our culture, traditions, economy and history.

Each year, Otonabee Conservation celebrates with tree plantings across the watershed. Plantings will take place through the fall season, not just during National Forest Week.

The Otonabee Conservation will plant over 30,000 trees and shrubs with the help of a number of community partners, including including City of Peterborough, Township of Douro-Dummer, Selwyn Township, Siemens Canada, NEFAB, Skyline Developments, LCBO, Peterborough Humane Society and students from Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board and Peterborough Victoria Northumberland and Clarington Catholic District School Board secondary schools.

These plantings are supported financially through Tree Canada, TD Canada Trust and One Tree Planted.

“We are looking forward to coming together with hundreds of community members and students to plant trees across the watershed this fall,” said Otonabee Conservation CAO Janette Loveys Smith. “Trees provide many benefits to us each day, and as they grow, they provide us with a natural climate change solution.”

Planting trees helps regulate temperatures and provides shelter to wildlife.

Trees filter the air we breathe, capture carbon dioxide mitigating climate change and stabilize the ground preventing erosion and reducing stormwater runoff/ flooding.

For more information visit the Otonabee Conservation website.

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