Our Blog
Seeing the Urban Forest: Why Tree Stories and Place Awareness Matter
How learning about sense of place can help us understand the reasons why neighborhoods either have or lack trees, and how we can draw on place awareness to grow a fairer and healthier urban forest.
Our Top Moments from 2022
This year was our biggest year ever! We distributed 2,276 trees with the help of 154 volunteers and we have so many memories to share, here are just a few of our highlights!
Urban Trees: Dead on Arrival
New buildings are required to plant trees but what happens after they’re planted?
These 2 maps show the difference we are making— And what we want to do more of!
New data from our Branch Out event this February offers a promising look at our impact.
A Tale of Two Cities
Two proposed projects within a mile of each other, in Fircrest and South Tacoma, highlight how different city policies are affecting tree coverage and quality of life in neighboring communities.
GRIT Project Makes South Tacoma a Focus Neighborhood
At Tacoma Tree Foundation, we believe that community and trees grow together. South Tacoma will be a neighborhood of focus for us in 2022–2023 thanks to a unique collaboration known as G.R.I.T.: Greening Research in Tacoma.
Final PWI grants will provide big impact in 2022
Tacoma Tree Foundation is getting a boost in the new year thanks to the Puyallup Watershed Initiative (PWI).
Friends of Friends of Trees: ACT Mentor Exchange
On a rainy Monday in October, I loaded an Oregon white oak seedling into the back of my car and headed down the road from Tacoma to Portland. It’s not a host gift I would give to just anyone, but the Garry oak prairies form a biological connection across Cascadia, and I did not want to show up at Friends of Trees empty-handed!
Introducing Lowell Wyse, PhD: TTF’s New Executive Director
Some good stories start in the middle.
This one starts on a rainy day in February 2019, when I first met Sarah Low in a Tacoma coffee shop. Sarah had recently created the Tacoma Tree Foundation, and I was dying to know more.
Succession is a Standard Operating Procedure for Change: Both in Forests and in Life
Walking through the forest at Point Defiance Park, you experience the forest around you as a cohesive system made up of many individual parts. Firs, cedars, madrones, maples, huckleberries, ferns, lichens, mosses, and fungi all exist in chaotic harmony, perfectly suited to the part they play in the health and well-being of the forest. Together, it all works. Together, it’s beautiful.
Existing Trees have Compounding Benefits: Keeping them is a worthwhile investment
A recent study by the American Forests Foundation calculated that to maintain the current levels of urban forest, each urban resident needs to plant approximately 7 trees in their lifetime. To grow our urban forests, that number grows to about 11 trees per person. But planting trees is only part of the story--a big part of maintaining and growing canopy coverage is actually preserving the trees we already have.
When Shade is Healthcare: Summer Heat and Tree Coverage
Last month Tacoma (and the entire PNW) felt first-hand how climate change is already affecting us and changing the seasons as we know them. Summers have been getting drier, hotter, and more uncomfortable—and will continue to do so. But if your house was shaded by mature trees, you were probably a little less hot than most of us.
Gather Together for Community and Nature
You might be tired of hearing about what a long and challenging year it has been, but it has been a long and challenging year. We still need to help each other out. Thankfully, helping others also helps you.
Douglas Fir: the Long-Time Companion of Cascadia
If we could nominate an official tree for Cascadia, we’d put down Douglas fir in a heartbeat. To us, Douglas-firs are synonymous with the Pacific Northwest. They’re rugged, beautiful, and durable--and have been useful companions to the inhabitants of the PNW for thousands of years.
Trees Need Leaves: How Biology Helps Us Understand How to Prune and Why We Should Not Top Trees
As any quick internet search will tell you, pruning is both an art and a science. Whole courses and workshops are taught on pruning. There are a lot of fine details on proper pruning, with different techniques being taught for different kinds of trees. We’re not here to get that complicated. Most of us don’t need to be pruning pros in order to take care of our trees properly. But there is one critical thing everyone needs to know: topping trees is bad.
Trees in Review: What We Planted and Grew in 2020
If you’re reading this--give yourself a big hug! We’ve almost made it through 2020, and that’s something to celebrate. This was one long, wild year filled with unexpected challenges and strange glimmering moments of joy. For us at Tacoma Tree Foundation, this year pressed us to stretch our creativity, in order to keep planting trees, building community, and advocating for a greener, healthier, and more connected Tacoma.
Small Wonders: Taking Pauses and New Perspectives
Over and over again we talk about what a wild, unexpected, and insanely long year it’s been. And over and over again, we keep trying to hold ourselves to impossible standards of keeping it all together and doing everything well. How many of us have actually taken a moment to pause, think, and reflect on current circumstances? How many of us have cut ourselves even an inch of slack, admitting that not everything can always go well?
Delightful Terrors: Getting Lost in the Woods
Halloween is different this year; for one, it feels much more necessary to have a break from everyday life. It’s been an escape to watch scary movies and put on spooky soundtracks, a diversion from the uncertainty and chaos that this year has brought. It’s been almost a delight to worry for an hour about witches or curses or being lost in the woods. There’s been something cathartic about dealing with a known terror, versus the uncertainty and ambiguity of the present moment.