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Hello Teachers! 

This page has been created especially for you to share with your classrooms. We hope you and your kids will enjoy the many fun activities and learning facts that have been included here.

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"The obvious link between Do Trees Have Mothers? and school curricula is to biology and ecology within the science curriculum, but links could also be made to human families and communities by comparing how trees nurture other organisms to how people support one another in healthy societies. This would make a great foundational book for schools planning scaffolded ecology units across the grades. A detached activity guide, outlining three activities suitable for young learners, accompanies the book."Review by Diana Mumford  for Canadian Teacher

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“Nuts” can’t wait to meet your kids! Have fun reading, playing and exploring the forest!

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Research tells us that the earlier a child is introduced to the natural world around them, the more likely they are to have a lifelong connection to nature.

Go find a Mother Tree

Look around! The mother tree is always the easiest one to spot. It’s the really big one in the middle of all the offspring. Trees are capable of communicating and learning. Mother trees teach their saplings to detect danger and even to call out when they are thirsty. If one of the youngsters gets sick, the mother tree will nourish it with carbon and nutrients.

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Use the senses to connect with the forest

When our senses are alert, we connect with nature’s rhythm. That helps our bodies and minds find a place of calm and focus. We feel refreshed, restored and in tune with the natural world around us!

 

Take a field trip into the forest and ask your kids to stand quietly touching a tree, as they close their eyes...

 

LISTEN carefully to the forest noises. What do they hear? birds? insects? rustling leaves? wind in the trees? falling twigs?

 

SMELL the pine needles and rich soil.

 

TOUCH and feel the texture of the bark and the crackling leaves.


TASTE a breath of fresh forest air. Let your kids know that the air we breathe in is the fresh air the trees breathe out. The air we breathe out is the air they breathe in. 

 

Now ask the kids to open their eyes and LOOK. They will SEE the wonder of the forest; saplings at their feet, an ant carrying away a leaf, a newly fallen acorn ready to seed or feed “Nuts”, the twinkling sunlight pushing through the leaves. 

In Japan, “forest bathing” is part of their daily lives. The Japanese call it “Shinrin-yoku”. Its proven health benefits mean it's even recognized by their national health system!

WHAT IS "SHINRIN-YOKU"? (森林浴)

The term Shinrin-yoku was coined by the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries in 1982, and can be defined as making contact and taking in the atmosphere of the forest.

 

THE BENEFITS OF "SHINRIN YOKU"

"Forest bathing" is good for both physical and mental wellbeing. It's proven to reduce the production of stress hormones, improve feelings of happiness and free up creativity, as well as lower heart rate and blood pressure, boost the immune system and accelerate recovery from illness.

Forest bathing

Some fun forest facts
 

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Trees have been around for 370 million years. That’s 310 million years before humans existed.

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Plants grow faster listening to music…amazingly true!

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Adding 1 tree to an open pasture will increase bird biodiversity from almost zero species to as many as 80 species.

Fungi are neither plants nor animals. They have their own eukaryotic kingdom of life.

forest soil

A handful of forest soil contains 3 million to 50 billion bacteria and 500,000 to 100 million individual fungal cells, all connected together.

Baobab mother tree

A seed from a baobab tree is digested and deposited many miles away…. with a very fertile start. :)

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A large oak tree can drop as many as 10,000 acorns during a ‘boom’ year of growth. This gives the acorns a better chance of germinating before our acorn-eating friends arrive for lunch.

Some not so fun facts.
 

Eco-anxiety is real.

In a recent study at The University of Bath (Caroline Hickman) with 10,000 young people aged 16-25, across 10 countries:

• 75% said they were frightened by the future, due to climate change

• 56% thought humanity was doomed

• 45% said their feelings about climate change negatively affected their daily lives

We need more trees in our lives!

Mother tree science references

There are many research studies that support the ways in which “mother trees” connect with the forest around them.

Reference:

 

The mother tree:

Simard, Suzanne. “The Mother Tree Project.” https://mothertreeproject.org/.

 

Trees can help each other:

Simard, Suzanne, David A. Perry, Melanie D. Jones, David D. Myrold, Daniel M. Durall, and Randy Molina. “Net Transfer of Carbon Between Ectomycorrhizal Tree Species in the Field.” Nature 388,

no. 6642 (1997): 579–82. https://doi.org/10.1038/41557.

 

Trees learn and remember:

Gagliano, Monica, Michael Renton, Martial Depczynski, and Stefano Mancuso. “Experience Teaches Plants to Learn Faster and Forget Slower in Environments Where It Matters.” Oecologia 175, no. 1 (2014): 63–72. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00442-013-2873-7.

 

Trees communicate with each other:

Gagliano, Monica, Stefano Mancuso, and Daniel Robert. “Towards Understanding Plant Bioacoustics.” Trends in Plant Science 17, no. 6 (2012): 323–25. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tplants.2012.03.002.

Rhodes, Christopher J. “The Whispering World of Plants.” Science Progress 100, no. 3 (2017): 331–37. https://doi.org/10.3184/003685017x14968299580423.

Maffei, Massimo & Wilhelm, Boland. (2007). “The Silent Scream of the Lima Bean.” Paper presented at Chemical Ecology: The Variety of Secondary Metabolites, Jena, Germany, June 2007. https://doi.org/10.13140/2.1.4887.6806.

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Join us with your classroom to learn more about the forest @dotreeshavemothers

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HAPPY READING AND PLAYING!  

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