On September 2, 2020

Rewild Vermont project sets goal of 100,000 trees

This summer, 350Vermont is launching a project to plant 100,000 trees across Vermont by the end of 2022. Rewild Vermont strives to build on synergies between food justice, climate action and ecological restoration to grow healthier, more just futures for Vermont.

“I’m excited about this project because it puts into practice a new approach to simultaneously growing food and creating resilient ecosystems,” said 350VT co-director Jaiel Pulskamp.

Volunteers will plant, protect and care for an array of native and food-producing species, developing local projects that restore degraded parts of their ecosystems and provide sustenance for vulnerable members of their communities. 350VT organizers, meanwhile, are working with partners like nurseries, conservation districts and other nonprofit organizations to secure affordable bulk seedlings and statewide support.

Priority sites for planting include riparian zones, habitat corridors and public spaces where fruit, nut and medicinal species can be accessible to all. Planting is set to begin this fall, then accelerate with bulk seedling orders and plantings in the spring of 2021, but some local groups have already started on the project.

Climate Advocates Bennington has organized the planting of food forests and orchards at their middle school, town park and wildlife management area.

The Rewild Vermont project is part of 350VT’s campaign Put Carbon in the Ground, and develop local, regenerative solutions to the climate emergency. It draws on new research showing that filling all available non-urban and non-agricultural land with native trees could absorb a “mind-blowing” two-thirds of the anthropogenic carbon in the atmosphere.

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

H.91 would overhaul Vermont’s response to homelessness, dissolving statewide motel program

April 23, 2025
By Carly Berlin/VTDigger This story, by Report for America corps member Carly Berlin, is published via a partnership between VTDigger and Vermont Public. A bill that would fundamentally overhaul Vermont’s response to homelessness is making its way through the Statehouse. H.91 provides a potential off-ramp to the state’s mass use of motel rooms as a…

DMV reminds Vermonters of upcoming REAL ID deadline

April 23, 2025
The Vermont Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) is reminding Vermonters that the REAL ID requirement takes effect on May 7, 2025. This means that people aged 18 and older will need a REAL ID-compliant Driver’s License or Identification Card, or another form of identification accepted by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), for domestic air travel and to…

New study shows most Vermonters report good health 

April 23, 2025
Newly released data from the Dept. of Health, April 15, shows that most adults in Vermont report they are in good health, but that education and income levels, disabilities and other factors can lead to stark differences in people’s health.  This data helps state officials and partners monitor trends and prioritize efforts to improve the…

Trade partners

April 23, 2025
For anyone who thinks that what is happening in Washington isn’t having a profound effect on life in Vermont, think again. It began with neighbors being fired from USAID and has evolved into destabilizing commerce with Vermont’s biggest trade partner, Canada. In addition, President Trump’s irresponsible rhetoric about Canada is having a profoundly negative impact…