Bringing it together
Tree Planting Partnerships
A Living Tribute partners with a network of over 20 national and state/local reforestation partners to plant your tribute trees on forests across the US and Canada.
Below are some of our key non-profit tree planting partners:
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Working with American Forests, the oldest conservation organization in the United States, A Living Tribute offers trees as gifts on public lands in need of reforestation. Through our 10 year plus partnership with American Forests, we have been able to contribute thousands of new trees to treasured locations such as Flathead National Forest in Montana, Sierra National Forest in California, Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia and Chattahoochee-Oconee National Forest in Georgia.
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The tree planting partner for our Forest Friends memorial tree program since 2014, our corporate partnership with the National Forest Foundation and the Sapling program allows us to plant trees on areas of the National Forest system that need it the most.
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The Sugar Pine Foundation is dedicated to restoring sugar pines and other white pines in California’s Lake Tahoe region. Our tribute trees planted and watered by the SPF and its volunteers are helping the South Lake Tahoe community heal from devastating wildfires such as the Emerald and Caldor Fires.
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For over a decade, we've been a proud business supporter of One Tree Planted, a 501(c)(3) environmental non-profit charity dedicated to reforestation across the U.S. and Canada (and worldwide). Through this partnership, we've contributed thousands of trees to reforestation projects in Florida, Colorado, Tennessee, Oregon, and nearly every province of Canada.
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TreeFolks has engaged thousands of volunteers to plant more than 3 million trees in Central Texas. Trees planted by TreeFolks are saplings in a variety of native species, planted to increase the species diversity along Central Texas river banks.
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Tree Canada is a non-profit organization that promotes the planting of trees in rural areas of Canada in need of reforestation/afforestation, such as British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, Quebec, and the Atlantic. Survival assessments are conducted in years 1, 2 and 5 after planting until the projects are “free-to-grow”.
As our forests encounter unprecedented challenges, it's crucial to safeguard current forests and rehabilitate those that have been damaged or lost. If your non-profit tree planting or conservation organization has ideas for ways that we can work together, please contact us.