Busy spring for riparian planting projects in NY

Volunteers planted 600 native trees and shrubs along Schoharie Creek near Jewett, NY. (Photo Laura Weyeneth, Greene County Soil and Water Conservation District)

By Tracy Brown

Trout Unlimited had a busy spring on the banks of streams in eight watersheds in New York, planting thousands of trees and shrubs to provide shade and other benefits.

The planting days were in partnership with the Arbor Day Foundation and New York State’s Department of Environmental Conservation’s “Trees for Tributaries” program.

From Earth Day (April 22) through early May, 262 volunteers planted 3,750 plants on 60.4 acres along streams in the Catskills, Adirondacks and the Hudson River.

Nine Trout Unlimited chapters participated. They were: Catskill Mountain; Ashokan-Pepacton; Beamoc; Adirondack; SUNY Cobleskill 5 Rivers; Clearwater; Dave Brandt; Columbia-Greene; New York City; Croton.

Trout Unlimited volunteers plant trees at Stony Clove Creek site near Phoenicia, NY. (Photo Leslie Zucker, Cornell Cooperative Extension of Ulster County)

TU’s New York City Trout in the Classroom Program, in partnership with Croton Chapter, also participated.

Partners in the effort included:

Ulster County Soil and Water Conservation District

Delaware County Soil and Water Conservation District

Catskill Streams Buffer Initiative of NYS DEP

Central Catskills Chamber of Commerce

•Margaretville, NY School

•Town of Rockland

Essex County Soil and Water Conservation District

SUNY Cobleskill

Schoharie Soil and Water Conservation District

Greene County Soil and Water Conservation District

•Village of Warwick, NY

•Roxbury NY School

•Westchester County Parks

Friends of the Upper Delaware River

•Various private landowners

Additional funding was provided by Millennium Stream Improvement Fund (MSIF). To learn more about MSIF please visit http://www.tu.org/tu-projects/catskill-stream-improvement.

Tracy Brown is the Northeastern restoration coordinator for Trout Unlimited.

By Mark Taylor. A native of rural southern Oregon, Mark Taylor has lived in Virginia since serving a stint as a ship-based naval officer in Norfolk. He joined the TU staff in 2014 after a 20-year run as a newspaper journalist, the final 16 as the outdoors editor of the Roanoke Times. A graduate of Northwestern University, he lives in Roanoke with his wife and, when they're home from college, his twin daughters.