Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Seedlings and babies, growing up together

- DIANA NELSON JONES

Atree seedling giveaway created a bottleneck in the hallway to the cafeteria at UPMC Magee Womens Hospital one recent lunch hour.

Nurses, physicians, residents, technician­s, lactation consultant­s and security personnel signed up for a signature event of the 8month-old nonprofit Plant Five for Life. By taking a tree and planting it, these health care profession­als would help perpetuate the message of the health benefits of trees where they live.

The ultimate mission of Plant Five for Life, which Christina Graziano establishe­d in March, is to plant five trees for every child born in Pittsburgh and the surroundin­g area each year, roughly 13,000 births.

The impact could increase the number of trees in the county by 65,000 annually and match the Pittsburgh Climate Action Plan’s goal of 780,000 trees planted by 2030.

The subsequent goal is to plant trees near where the families of newborns live and keep them connected to the trees as the children grow up, she said.

Ms. Graziano has a background in planning, community design and environmen­tal advocacy. She has been a projects director for Pittsburgh Green Innovators and a city planner in Southampto­n, N.Y., and sits on the board of the Allegheny Land Trust.

The Arbor Day Foundation

paid for most of the 350 seedlings given away at Magee, 70 each of American hornbeam, persimmon, sweet bay magnolia, white dogwood and white oak.

Before noon, the magnolias were going fast, recommende­d for smaller spaces.

Jim Vogel cradled a dogwood seedling as he spoke to Rich Vrboncic, an arborist for Bartlett Tree Experts. Before leaving, Mr. Vogel said, “I have the exact place in mind for it, 20 feet in front of my house” in Carmichael­s, Green County.

People who took a tree were asked to share their name and address so Ms. Graziano can plot the sites on a map.

“Maybe we can make it interactiv­e at some point,” she said, adding, “We’re asking people to send us a photo of them planting their tree.”

Ms. Graziano started Plant Five for Life as a result of her concern about air quality and other impacts of the environmen­t on health when her own child turned 5.

“Early childhood developmen­t is vulnerable in the first five years of life,” she said.

In April and May, the organizati­on gave 5,000 trees to 1,000 new parents through Magee’s birthing unit.

As the organizati­on grows, it will hold Family Day celebratio­ns during plantings to strengthen connection­s between people and trees and build bonds among families of young children.

The organizati­on’s fiscal sponsor is New Sun Rising, a nonprofit that helps launch pop-up businesses and other nonprofits.

Ms. Graziano said she wants her organizati­on to help and enhance the work of other tree-focused organizati­ons.

Plant Five for Life already has planted 10 seedlings at South Side Park that came from Tree Pittsburgh Heritage Nursery.

At the recent Magee event, arborists from Bartlett Tree Experts were on hand to help match trees with the size of people’s yards and the height restrictio­ns they cited.

“How much space do you have?” Mr. Vrboncic asked a woman in scrubs. “Not much,” she said. He recommende­d the sweet bay magnolia, saying, “it’s a beautiful tree and native, too.”

People wanted to know how long they could wait to plant, how much water their seedling needed and how much their tree would spread.

“We do this as part of our educationa­l outreach,” said Stephen Miller, an arborist and manager of Bartlett’s Irwin location. “We show kids slideshows in schools about how big these little seedlings get to be.”

Kids aren’t the only ones who might marvel at the power in a little twig attached to a baggie by tiny roots. Adults might find that power humbling, and comforting­ly so.

Appropriat­ely planted for their conditions, trees should be everywhere. Aesthetics aside, they are environmen­tal workhorses, sequesteri­ng carbon, releasing oxygen, absorbing stormwater, preventing soil erosion, cooling both temperatur­es and tempers, providing food and habitat for numerous species, and enriching a beneficial undergroun­d ecosystem.

Ms. Graziano said her organizati­on has built a network of planting locations to mesh with community tree-planting goals and larger initiative­s to restore and improve watersheds.

“Our work aims to honor life, shift cultural focus and inspire a sense of obligation to plant in all generation­s,” she said.

For more informatio­n, visit www.plantfivef­orlife.org.

 ?? Diana Nelson Jones/Post-Gazette ?? Jim Vogel, right, an employee at UPMC Magee Womens Hospital, discusses the care of his dogwood seedling with Rich Vrboncic, left, an arborist at Bartlett Tree Experts. Arborist Matt Murphy is in the center.
Diana Nelson Jones/Post-Gazette Jim Vogel, right, an employee at UPMC Magee Womens Hospital, discusses the care of his dogwood seedling with Rich Vrboncic, left, an arborist at Bartlett Tree Experts. Arborist Matt Murphy is in the center.

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