Russian Success!
Read below the inspiring work of Greenpeace Russia and their Kids for Forest Restoration - this programme is the underlying inspiration for the School Tree Nurseries, and it has been very successful.
ERS aims at creating similar programmes worldwide. If you would like to support this work in Russia, please write to:
"Kids for Forest Restoration"
Greenpeace Russia
Phone: +7 495 926-50-45 ext. 304
Fax: +7 495 926-50-45 ext. 106
Mailing address:
Greenpeace Russia, GSP-4,
Moscow Russia, 127994
The following is written by Sveta Piskareva describing the programme and why it is so important to encourage this throughout the world:
No forest? – plant it!
Greenpeace Russia project – “Kids for Forests Restoration”.
In spring 2002, Greenpeace Russia launched the Kids for Forests Project aimed at reforestation in central and southern regions of European Russia carried out by rural school children. Some parts of the project are made in cooperation with Sibecocenter (Novosibirsk region) and Global Forest Watch.
Why plant?
Most of hardwoods along borders with steppes were destroyed by human activities. Indigenous deciduous forest landscapes were replaced by tilled agricultural lands and pastures. People have been logging and clear cutting without thinking about the consequences.
As the result - by the end of the 19th century the vast treeless territories suffered because of shallow rivers, growing gullies, frequent droughts and hot winds sweeping away the most fertile soil. At least 5-6 million hectares of converted forest lands are represented now by areas with eroded soils and other “waste lands” that are not in use any more, most degraded lands can hardly be used for agricultural needs. Annually in European Russia gullies eat up 50 thousand hectares. The most crucial and effective step to preserve and restore fertility would be to create protective forest strips along fields, gullies and rivers as well as on degraded lands.
State or public?
In 1950-1970s USSR government made attempts to solve some of these problems with planting 2 millions hectares of “forest belts” (several rows of trees edging fields). This work was designed to promote economic profitability of agricultural endeavors but not the restoration of deciduous forest ecosystems. Nevertheless, protective tree strips and counter-erosion forests have been protecting lands against water and wind erosion, droughts and hot winds. However, the program of creating protective forests has not been fully completed.
At present, a lot is being said about the necessity to increase agricultural effectiveness and to restore soil fertility. On paper federal and regional programs are being developed with the goal of increasing land fertility. In particular, such programs provide for protective planting and counter-erosion forests. Nevertheless, as a rule in practice, no funding is allocated to such efforts and nothing happens in reality.
It would appear to be in the self-interest of agricultural enterprises to protect forest landscapes, as they are necessary for the sustainability of their business. However, these enterprises have neither the skills nor the equipment to grow seedlings and then plant them in the wild.
At the same time, many rural inhabitants of sparsely forested areas face the consequences of deforestation and are well aware of the necessity of forest restoration. Most people lose their jobs, the youth moves to large towns and cities. Whole villages “die out”.
Schools and teachers are the most active participants in rural communities. They are ready to participate in forest restoration activities even if they do not get any additional resources for this.
School kids undertake the task! 
The idea to engage the public in forest restoration work first appeared at the end of the 19th century. By then, enough experience had been accumulated about how to establish tree nurseries to grow seedlings of almost all species native to our forests. In some cases, such nurseries were created within school territories.
The experience of forestry workers in the late 19th and early 20th centuries is still in use today. For a long time, rural schools have been islands of activity due to public initiatives. Most teachers eagerly respond to new ideas that can make the education process more interesting and motivate school children to undertake new, “adult” tasks. The idea of forest restoration easily interests children – many rural boys and girls, who see endless fields and sparse trees around them, dream about a real forest, so they are excited about the prospect of growing their own forest.
In spring 2002, Greenpeace Russia made proposals to dozens of rural schools in the Ryazan region to start forest restoration activities. Most schools supported our idea. This is how the Kids for Forests project was born. Later, more schools from the Ryazan, Tula, Belgorod, Orel and Lipetsk regions joined the project.
How we work
The main idea of the project is to create a tree nursery in each school where children can grow saplings. In this respect, rural schools have an advantage compared to urban ones. There is a small, local garden next to most rural schools where children grow vegetables for school canteens. During the summer rural children look after their garden. So it’s easy to allot some territory for a tree nursery there. For urban schools, it can be much more difficult to find a convenient spot for the garden and to take care of it, as the majority of urban kids leave cities for the summer holidays and there in no one left to take care about the forest nursery in summer.
Why is it so important to teach children how to grow tree saplings? The reason is that it is not so easy to find tree saplings in sparsely forested areas. Sometimes they can be taken from the forest without damaging the ecosystem, but in many regions, there is so little forest left that young trees can not be found anymore. Of course, there are state owned tree nurseries, but they are rare in sparsely forested regions. Also, most state nurseries do not grow deciduous species because it takes significant time and effort. That’s why it is easier to create a private, local tree nursery to grow various species from seeds and saplings.
Such nurseries offer a number of advantages compared to state ones. First, school children are usually not limited in their choice of species. Second, trees get more care, so they grow stronger and are more viable and more resistant to diseases. Third, saplings are always ready for planting, and the school can choose any convenient time to plant them in the wild. Finally, children can witness all stages of a tree’s growth, and have the satisfaction of raising a tree from a seed they planted themselves.
Each school that joined the “Kids for Forests Restoration” project created a small school nursery under the guidance of Greenpeace Russia. Growing trees is fascinating, but difficult work, so we first give children and teachers species that are easy to grow – pine, larch, willow, oak, maple. If the first experience is positive and children like the work, they can try growing more “demanding” trees such as lime and ash.
Either in spring or autumn, we deliver new seeds to the schools so that young forestry specialists can continue their forest restoration activities. We also answer all questions, share our experience, tell about the experience of other schools, and bring tutorial materials.
What is a school tree nursery like? This can be a small plot of land, initially as small as 5x5 m. A nursery consists of two parts – sown and school areas. In the sown part, seeds are grown into seedlings. Then, the seedlings are planted in the school area, where they have more space to grow further. It takes 3-4 years for coniferous species to grow into a sapling and 1-2 years for deciduous species.
We try to supply school children with those species that are native to a territory. In central Russia, these are local species of pine, oak, birch, alder, lime, maple, ash, poplar, willow, and elm.
However, it is insufficient to only learn how to plant saplings in a tree nursery. It is important to know how to plant them in the wild so that a sapling can have the chance to grow into a mature tree. Every autumn, we organize one day tree-planting camps for the participating schools to train children to grow their own forest. We pay special attention to the choice of the place for planting. These are normally territories where trees are really necessary and where they won’t be an obstacle for anybody. Such areas include shores of watercourses, edges of gullies, abandoned open pits, and other barren terrain. It is necessary that the chosen spot has no traces of pasture or grass cutting. The grass should not be too high; otherwise, it will oppress the growth of saplings in their first years and might cause their death in case of grass fires.
School children against fires
Unfortunately, burning dry grass threatens school forests every year. To protect young trees, some preventative measures can be taken – choose lands with low grass, remove and turn up the top layer of soil around each sapling (so that fire cannot reach the tree), and plough the earth around each tree.
Nevertheless, the problem can not be solved without changing the attitude toward burning grass. Forests planted by children are a good argument. We involve children in our fire prevention campaign. Kids make anti-fire posters, distribute leaflets, install information stands at the places where they plant trees, and carry out opinion polls of the local population.
First results
Since spring 2002, 198 schools from the Ryazan, Tula, Belgorod, Lipetsk, Orel, Moscow region, and the city of Moscow have participated in the Kids for Forest Restoration project. At present, 182 of them have their own tree nurseries. Over 4 years of work, school children have planted about 130 000 saplings in the wild. The oldest school forests (mostly pine – the easiest species to grow) are 1-1.5 meters high and are noticeable from a distance. In a few years, they will surpass the average human height.
We are growing in number
The issue of forest restoration is crucial not only for central and southern regions of European Russia but for many other areas as well. It is also necessary in many southern regions of Siberia and the Far East. In spring 2004, Greenpeace Russia and other non-governmental organizations started the All-Russian Movement “Kids for Forests Restoration”. Every year, more and more schools across Russia join the reforestation project.
We sincerely hope that in the future more concerned people will participate in the forest restoration project.
Let’s grow our forest together!