We are sure you have noticed … Christmas is approaching. There is an air of well-intentioned panic in the air, as swarms of people race around to purchase gifts for their loved ones, hoping that this year, the candlestick/photoframe/novelty mug won’t end up in an op-shop or being re-gifted*, three weeks later. Gifting can be a tricky business, both on a personal and an ethical level.
*mind you we are big fans of op shops and re-gifting.
But there is a way around it. We have been so filled with gladness this year to see many people (48 to be precise) buying trees as gifts for friends, family members and colleagues. And not just for Christmas, but for birthdays, anniversaries, as a thank you to teachers and well …. just because!
All up 945 trees!
No panic involved, no rushing around, no looming landfill problem. Simply a loving thought, a promise of life, and a practical gesture of solidarity with our struggling planet.
And with that in mind, fifteen (15) trees have been planted on behalf of:
Thirty trees (30) have been planted on the behalf of:
Forty-five (45) trees for 360Biolabs and seventy-five (75) trees for Carol McInneny and her extended friends and family.
This year, we organised these trees to be planted across 4 koala habitat sites with 4 amazing community groups:
SITE 1. Mt Arthur Reserve, Mornington VIC.
At the Mornington Peninsula, 500 koala habitat trees were planted by Dirk Jansen and the Mornington Peninsula Koala Conservation. This group was founded 2 years ago and represent 12 Landcare groups on the Mornington Peninsula. Their aims are to increase koala populations through connecting patches of remnant bushland. Working with landholders, they are creating biolinks. Habitat loss is the biggest cause of koala numbers decreasing, and so this project is vitally important to the existing populations on the Mornington Peninsula.
SITE 2. You Yangs, VIC.
In the You Yangs, Janine Duffy and the The Koala Clancy Foundation, planted 200 native trees. With the help of wonderful landowners, they are are putting back some of the River Red Gum forests that once grew in this district. There are benefits for koalas, birds, insects and of course enormous benefits to the river itself.
SITE 3. Warrnambool, VIC.
At Warrnambool, Jane O’Beirne and the Friends of Hopkins River, planted 60 trees in an area above Hopkins Falls on the riverbanks of the Hopkins River. This project is a continued effort to increase wildlife habitat with focus on trees popular with koala populations.
SITE 4. Phillip Island, VIC.
Geoff Trease and the Base Coast Island Landcare Group planted 185 of our trees at Ventnor on Phillip Island. The vegetation that has been established will link with existing roadside vegetation and some other remnant vegetation along a water way which is called Salt Water Creek. David Rooks whose property the planting took place said, ‘We are so grateful to Fifteen Trees supporters program for your help in providing these plants. They will to help enhance biodiversity and provide many other positive environmental outcomes’.
Along with the trees as gifts, this year we included a beautiful enamel koala pin, handmade in Ballarat by the talented Michelle of Bok Bok B’Gerk. The pins were a great hit. We hope you all loved them.
We are all reeling from this crazy Covid year. We are all anxious about what it means for our future. So many of us feel the need to do something, to start somewhere, somehow. This is one small way to start. Every act of gifting and every dollar we spend says something. It tells a story about what we want our world to look like, as well as how we love.
Colleen Filippa | Founder & Director | Fifteen Trees
Restoring Australian ecosystems. Supporting communities with their revegetation projects for a greener and healthier planet.
Fifteen Trees acknowledges Indigenous Australians as the traditional custodians of the lands on which we work, live and play.
We recognise that Indigenous Australians have cared for and lived in harmony with this land for millennia, and their knowledge and wisdom of the land endures.
We pay our respects to Elders past, present and emerging and stand in solidarity as Indigenous Australians seek a fairer and more sustainable future for the land and its people.