Chattanooga Times Free Press

Reflection Riding, city offer free trees to residents

City of Chattanoog­a, Reflection Riding offer free trees to residents through program

- BY EMILY CRISMAN STAFF WRITER

In an effort to replace trees downed by the Easter Sunday tornado, as well as improve water quality across the city, Chattanoog­a is partnering with Reflection Riding Arboretum and Nature Center to give away free trees to residents through the Growing Resilient Neighborho­ods program.

People can pick out trees at the Reflection Riding greenhouse during its operating hours Tuesday through Saturday from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m. until all 1,000 trees are gone, or attend an event where the program is giving away trees.

The first giveaway will be at the farmers market at the Bethlehem Center on Saturday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., and

others are planned for every Saturday in November at to-bedetermin­ed locations.

“November is the perfect time to plant trees,” Reflection Riding President and CEO Mark McKnight said.

Initially the idea behind the program was to replace trees on private property in the tornadodam­aged

area of East Brainerd, but it was expanded to include all city residents because of the benefits trees provide — including saving the city money down the line, city of Chattanoog­a water quality supervisor Joshua Rogers said.

The cost to the city to initiate the program and purchase the trees is $25,000, he said.

“Trees do a fantastic job of helping with water quality, and there are a lot of economic benefits to trees that a lot of people may not recognize,” Rogers said.

Trees can help prolong the life of the city’s stormwater system by intercepti­ng rainwater before it comes in contact with the soil, reducing the flow of stormwater going into the system, he said.

Trees also provide shade to help reduce a homeowner’s energy costs in the summer, McKnight said.

All of the trees available through the program are native, and native species that are not as well- represente­d in the Chattanoog­a area were selected to provide food for a variety of native wildlife, McKnight said.

“Chattanoog­a is an incredibly biodiverse place,” he said, adding that people should want as many different native

tree species in the local landscape as possible, since each species of wildlife has its own host plant.

Rogers said trees also help keep local creeks cool for wildlife by providing shade and preventing runoff that would cause the water temperatur­e to rise.

City residents who have paid their stormwater fees can get two trees of their choice, and residents of tornadodam­aged areas can get four.

A large part of Reflection Riding’s mission is education,

McKnight said, so experts will be on hand at each giveaway and daily at the nature center’s nursery to help people choose the best trees for their property.

They said they plan to continue the program in the future, increasing the number of species and the number of trees offered each year.

For more informatio­n, visit chattanoog­a.gov/waterquali­ty or reflection­riding.org.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Greenhouse and nursery manager Dylan Hackett, left, and Mark McKnight, president and CEO of Reflection Riding arboretum and nature center, talk about the trees available as part of the Growing Resilient Neighborho­ods project on Thursday at the Reflection Riding Arboretum and Nature Center.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Greenhouse and nursery manager Dylan Hackett, left, and Mark McKnight, president and CEO of Reflection Riding arboretum and nature center, talk about the trees available as part of the Growing Resilient Neighborho­ods project on Thursday at the Reflection Riding Arboretum and Nature Center.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Mark McKnight looks at some of the trees available as part of the Growing Resilient Neighborho­ods project Thursday at the Reflection Riding Arboretum and Nature Center.
STAFF PHOTO BY MATT HAMILTON Mark McKnight looks at some of the trees available as part of the Growing Resilient Neighborho­ods project Thursday at the Reflection Riding Arboretum and Nature Center.

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