When the Forest Burns Twice

When the Forest Burns Twice: A Call to Protect Saskatoon’s Afforestation Areas

After two devastating spring fires in Saskatoon’s afforestation areas, the temptation is to talk only about flames: ignition points, suppression efforts, acreage burned, and the cost of response. But if we stop there, we miss the deeper story. These greenspaces are not empty buffers between roads and neighbourhoods. They are living places that store carbon, slow wind, shelter birds and pollinators, hold memory, and offer residents a rare experience of urban nature within walking distance of home.

What burned was not just vegetation. What burned was part of a relationship between people and place.

The Lesson from Successful Greenspace Campaigns

Across cities and park systems around the world, the most effective no-smoking and no-open-fire campaigns share a common feature: they move beyond simple prohibition. Rules matter, but durable compliance comes when people understand why the rule exists and see themselves as participants in protecting a shared ecological commons.

nature trail landscape with warning sign

Public education campaigns such as Smokey Bear wildfire prevention messaging in North America have long emphasized personal responsibility for preventing human-caused fires. Many municipalities now pair bylaw enforcement with clear trailhead signage, seasonal fire-risk messaging, social marketing, and volunteer stewardship programs that normalize safer behaviour in parks and natural areas.

The research-backed pattern

  1. Visible norms: consistent trailhead signs, pavement markings, and reminders that make the expected behaviour obvious.
  2. Seasonal risk communication: escalating messages during dry, windy periods and fire bans.
  3. Stewardship and social ownership: volunteer ambassadors, community patrols, and “leave no trace” style education.
  4. Targeted enforcement: fines and inspections focused on high-risk behaviour rather than broad, low-visibility policing.
  5. Infrastructure support: safe smoking-disposal options outside greenspaces, ash receptacles where appropriate, and designated gathering areas away from combustible vegetation.

Why Afforestation Areas Need Special Protection

Afforestation areas can appear resilient because trees remain standing after a fire. Ecologically, however, repeated spring fires can create a dangerous cycle. Young seedlings are lost before they establish. Ground-layer vegetation that stabilizes soil and retains moisture is removed. Nesting habitat disappears. Invasive or fire-tolerant species may gain an advantage. Recovery becomes slower and more expensive after each subsequent burn.

In prairie cities, spring is often the worst possible time for human-caused ignition: cured grasses from the previous season, low humidity, wind, and abundant fine fuels can turn a cigarette butt or small flame into a fast-moving grass fire in minutes. Fire agencies across North America routinely identify discarded smoking materials, unattended recreational fires, and other human activities among the preventable causes of vegetation fires.

A Saskatoon Approach: From Compliance to Care

If the goal is simply issuing tickets, a bylaw campaign can be narrow. If the goal is protecting afforestation areas for decades, the campaign must be cultural.

A practical framework for Saskatoon could include:

ActionPurpose
Seasonal “No Smoking / No Open Fires” activationTemporary high-visibility signs, social media alerts, and trailhead notices during elevated fire danger.
Place-based messagingExplain what the area protects—bird habitat, pollinators, carbon storage, and neighbourhood resilience—not just what is prohibited.
Community stewardshipTrain volunteer trail ambassadors to educate visitors, report hazards, and reinforce norms without confrontation.
Safe alternativesProvide ash receptacles and smoking areas outside sensitive greenspaces so compliance is easier.
Targeted enforcement at high-risk timesFocus patrols during windy, dry periods and after major events rather than relying on sporadic enforcement.
Public reporting and feedbackShare fire-risk conditions, incidents prevented, and restoration progress so residents can see the impact of their actions.

The Message That Changes Behaviour

People rarely remember the exact wording of a bylaw. They remember a story about what is being protected.

A campaign that says only “No Smoking. No Fires. Fine Applies.” may achieve awareness. A campaign that says “One cigarette can erase years of restoration, destroy nesting habitat, and put neighbours and firefighters at risk. Protect this forest.” is more likely to create responsibility.

That distinction matters. Successful public-health and environmental campaigns—from seatbelts to wildfire prevention—work best when they connect individual actions to collective consequences and make the desired behaviour part of community identity.

“A greenspace is not protected by signage alone. It is protected when residents treat a cigarette, a camp stove, or an open flame as a decision that affects birds, trees, neighbours, firefighters, and future visitors. The bylaw draws the line; the community keeps it.”

After the Fires

Restoration crews can replant. Firefighters can extinguish. Ecologists can monitor recovery. But prevention is the only strategy that protects both the forest and the people who depend on it.

After two spring fires, Saskatoon has a choice. We can treat these events as isolated incidents, or we can use them to build a stronger culture of greenspace stewardship: no smoking in sensitive natural areas, no open fires where bylaws prohibit them, clear communication during high-risk periods, and a shared understanding that urban forests are infrastructure as surely as roads, water lines, and bridges.

The trees that remain standing after a fire are asking the same question the community should be asking: What will we do differently before the next spark?

saskatoon.ca

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Coming soon the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest honouring the Humboldt Broncos

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”Richard St. Barbe Baker

The South Saskatchewan Watershed

The South Saskatchewan Watershed, Ecological Restoration, and the Legacy of the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest

Rooted in Memory, Shaped by Ice

The proposed Clavet Memorial Healing Forest, located near Clavet, Saskatchewan, occupies a remarkable place within the South Saskatchewan River watershed. Situated on land shaped by the retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet more than 12,000 years ago, the site stands at the intersection of geological history, ecological restoration, and community healing.

Research by geographer Larry Edwin Hodges documented that the area surrounding the Memorial Healing Forest was influenced by the margins of glacial ice, the formation of Glacial Lake Elstow, Lake Saskatoon I and II, and the development of the Clavet Moraine. Ancient meltwater channels, glacial lakes, and ice-front deposits helped create the rolling prairie landscape that exists today. The forest site lies within a landscape forged by immense environmental change—a place where glaciers retreated, waters shifted, and new ecosystems emerged.

Today, the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest seeks to continue that story of renewal.

The project honours the sixteen lives lost and thirteen people injured in the Humboldt Broncos tragedy of April 6, 2018, while simultaneously restoring a parcel of land to ecological health. The vision, “Rooted in Memory, Growing in Hope,” reflects the powerful relationship between remembrance and restoration.

The site lies within the South Saskatchewan River watershed, one of Canada’s most important freshwater systems. The watershed supports communities, agriculture, wildlife habitat, wetlands, groundwater recharge, recreation, and biodiversity across much of Alberta and Saskatchewan before eventually contributing to the Saskatchewan River system flowing toward Hudson Bay.

As we experience increasingly complex environmental changes, our ecosystems—the very foundation of healthy, productive societies—are changing in unprecedented ways. Climate change, biodiversity loss, habitat fragmentation, invasive species, and water quality pressures are affecting watersheds throughout Canada. These challenges reinforce the need for long-term investments in ecological restoration, monitoring, stewardship, and public education.

Restoration of abandoned or underutilized lands offers significant benefits for watersheds. Native trees, shrubs, grasses, and wetlands help slow runoff, reduce soil erosion, improve infiltration, increase groundwater recharge, filter pollutants, sequester carbon, and provide critical wildlife habitat. Healthy landscapes function as natural infrastructure, supporting the long-term resilience of watersheds and freshwater ecosystems.

The Clavet Memorial Healing Forest represents an opportunity to transform a previously undeveloped site into a living ecological asset. Through afforestation, native grassland restoration, citizen science initiatives, environmental education, and long-term stewardship, the project can contribute to the health of the South Saskatchewan watershed while creating a place of reflection, healing, and community connection.

The lessons learned from this restoration effort extend beyond Saskatchewan. Watersheds are interconnected systems, and while the South Saskatchewan River watershed and the Columbia River Basin are separate drainage basins divided by the Continental Divide, they share common environmental challenges and opportunities. Both watersheds originate in landscapes shaped by glaciers. Both depend upon healthy headwaters, wetlands, riparian areas, and resilient ecosystems. Both support communities, biodiversity, agriculture, and economic activity across vast regions.

The Columbia Basin, stretching from the Rocky Mountains through British Columbia and the northwestern United States, and the South Saskatchewan watershed, flowing eastward across the Canadian Prairies, demonstrate how upstream stewardship influences downstream outcomes. Although water from these basins ultimately reaches different oceans and seas, their management requires similar approaches based on watershed science, ecological restoration, climate adaptation, and collaborative stewardship.

This shared understanding highlights an important principle: restoring land anywhere within a watershed contributes to the broader health of freshwater systems. Whether in the Columbia Basin, the South Saskatchewan watershed, or watersheds across Canada, restoration projects strengthen ecological resilience and support the long-term protection of lakes, rivers, aquifers, wetlands, and groundwater resources.

The Clavet Memorial Healing Forest embodies this vision. It is more than a memorial. It is a living demonstration of how conservation, remembrance, and environmental stewardship can work together to create lasting benefits for people, wildlife, and water.

Just as glaciers once shaped this landscape and ancient lakes nurtured the emergence of new ecosystems, the Memorial Healing Forest offers an opportunity for renewal. Rooted in memory and shaped by ice, the forest will stand as a symbol of resilience, restoration, and hope for future generations, while contributing to the health of the South Saskatchewan watershed and the protection of Canada’s precious freshwater resources.

Rooted in Memory, Shaped by Ice: The Glacial History and Geological Legacy of the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest, Saskatchewan

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Coming soon the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest honouring the Humboldt Broncos

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”Richard St. Barbe Baker

Rooted in Memory, Shaped by Ice: The Glacial History and Geological Legacy of the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest, Saskatchewan

Rooted in Memory, Shaped by Ice: The Glacial History and Geological Legacy of the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest, Saskatchewan

Based on the geological interpretation presented by Larry Edwin Hodges in Morphology of the South Saskatchewan River Valley: Outlook to Saskatoon (University of Saskatchewan, Ph.D. Thesis), the proposed Clavet Memorial Healing Forest occupies a landscape that was profoundly influenced by the retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet during the final stages of the last Ice Age. The site at NW 17-35-03-W3, immediately northwest of the former shoreline of Glacial Lake Elstow and just northwest of the Clavet Moraine, lies within a region that preserves evidence of some of the most dynamic glacial and post-glacial processes documented in central Saskatchewan.

Ice at the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest During the Lake Hanley Phase

During the period Hodges refers to as the Lake Hanley Phase, the effective ice front had begun retreating from its maximum southern extent, but large lobes of glacial ice still occupied both the Saskatoon Lowland and the Last Mountain Lake Lowland. At that time, the Memorial Healing Forest site would have been situated very near the margin of the Saskatoon Lowland ice lobe.

Hodges notes that differences in elevations of lake sediments and the cutting of the Blackstrap spillway indicate that the Saskatoon Lowland ice lobe still extended onto portions of the Allan Hills Upland, Hawarden Hills Upland, and The Coteau. The proposed forest site lies within this transitional landscape between active glacier ice and expanding glacial lakes.

According to Figure VI.c of the thesis, the future Memorial Healing Forest was located immediately northwest of Glacial Lake Elstow, placing it along what would have been an evolving shoreline environment where melting ice, expanding lake waters, and sediment deposition interacted continuously.

The Clavet Moraine and the Memorial Healing Forest

One of the most important glacial features associated with the site is the Clavet Moraine.

A moraine is a ridge or accumulation of unconsolidated glacial debris (till) deposited by a glacier. As the ice advanced and retreated, it transported clay, silt, sand, gravel, cobbles, and boulders, leaving them behind when the glacier melted.

Hodges describes the Clavet Moraine as a distinct ice-margin feature created when active ice in the Saskatoon Lowland continued to push eastward into the Elstow Basin after ice in adjacent regions had already begun to stagnate and retreat.

The thesis states:

“Ice in the Saskatoon Lowland remained active longer than in the Elstow Basin, and pushed slightly into the basin from the west to form the Clavet Moraine and related outwash gravel deposits.”

This interpretation suggests that the glacier margin remained dynamic near present-day Clavet while surrounding areas experienced significant downwasting and lake expansion.

The proposed Memorial Healing Forest is situated immediately northwest of this moraine system. As a result, the site occupies terrain directly influenced by the final advances and standstills of glacier ice approximately 12,000–14,000 years ago.

Lake Saskatoon I and Lake Saskatoon II

The Memorial Healing Forest also lies within a landscape shaped by two major glacial lakes identified by Hodges:

  • Glacial Lake Saskatoon I
  • Glacial Lake Saskatoon II

These lakes occupied portions of the Saskatoon Lowland during successive stages of deglaciation.

Evidence cited by Hodges includes:

  • Lacustrine sediments covering the Clavet Moraine
  • Lake deposits over former meltwater channels
  • Fine-grained sediments extending across much of the Elstow Basin
  • Deposits associated with the Dundurn Bench and Blackstrap region

Because the Clavet Moraine is overlain by lake sediments reaching elevations of at least 1770 feet (540 metres), the moraine must have existed before portions of Lake Saskatoon I flooded the region.

This places the Memorial Healing Forest within an area that likely experienced:

  1. Active glacial ice occupation
  2. Moraine construction
  3. Meltwater outwash deposition
  4. Flooding by proglacial lakes
  5. Subsequent drainage and landscape stabilization

The Blackstrap-Elstow Drainage System

Figures VI.d and VI.k in the thesis demonstrate that the Clavet area occupied a strategic position within a major deglacial drainage network.

As ice retreated northward, meltwater flowed through:

  • The Blackstrap spillway
  • Strehlow Pond Channel
  • North Bradwell Channel
  • The Elstow Basin
  • Early South Saskatchewan River channels

The Memorial Healing Forest lies near this network of former meltwater routes.

Although the site itself is not located within a major spillway channel, it occupies terrain adjacent to corridors through which enormous volumes of glacial meltwater once moved toward newly developing drainage systems.

A Landscape of Ice, Water, and Transition

The geology around the Memorial Healing Forest records a remarkable sequence of environmental change.

Approximately 13,000 years ago:

  • Thick Laurentide ice covered the region.
  • The glacier margin stood near present-day Clavet.
  • The Clavet Moraine formed as ice pushed into the Elstow Basin.
  • Meltwater created outwash plains and gravel deposits.
  • Glacial Lake Elstow expanded along the ice margin.
  • Lake Saskatoon I flooded portions of the landscape, and the proposed forest was northeast of Glacial Lake Saskatoon I being that it was north of the North Bradwell Channel.
  • The proposed forest was under Glacial Lake Saskatoon II which occupied lowlands northwest.
  • Meltwater channels evolved into the drainage systems that would eventually become part of the modern South Saskatchewan River watershed.

The proposed Memorial Healing Forest therefore occupies a landscape forged at the boundary between glacier and lake—a place where ice, water, sediment, and time combined to create the rolling prairie terrain visible today.

Significance for the Memorial Healing Forest

The geological history provides a powerful metaphor for the purpose of the Memorial Healing Forest.

The site exists on land shaped by the retreat of immense glaciers, the formation of ancient lakes, and the gradual emergence of new ecosystems. What was once a landscape of ice and uncertainty became one of renewal and life.

Similarly, the Memorial Healing Forest seeks to transform a place of remembrance into a living legacy of hope, resilience, healing, and growth.

Just as the glaciers receded and new landscapes emerged, the forest will stand as a testament to recovery after tragedy—honouring the sixteen lives lost in the Humboldt Broncos bus crash, supporting survivors and families, and creating a lasting sanctuary rooted in memory and growing in hope.

Rooted in Memory, Shaped by Ice

Reference

Hodges, L. E. (1975). Morphology of the South Saskatchewan River Valley: Outlook to Saskatoon. Doctoral Dissertation, Department of Geography, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, pp. 247, 255–257, 272–273.

Christiansen, E. A. (1968). The Quaternary of the Saskatoon Area, Saskatchewan. Saskatchewan Research Council, Geology Division Report.

Greer, W., & Christiansen, E. A. Studies of Late Wisconsinan deglaciation and glacial lake development in central Saskatchewan.

Edmunds, F. H. Research on the Elstow Basin and Lake Elstow phases of deglaciation in south-central Saskatchewan.

Klassen, R. W. (1989). Quaternary Geology of the Southern Prairie Provinces. Geological Survey of Canada.

Christiansen, E. A. (1979). The Wisconsinan Late Glacial History of the Saskatoon Region. Geological Association of Canada Special Papers.

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Coming soon the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest honouring the Humboldt Broncos

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”Richard St. Barbe Baker

Update on the George Genereux Urban Regional Park Wildfire Area

Update on the George Genereux Urban Regional Park Wildfire Area

We received a follow-up report regarding the wildfire that occurred in George Genereux Urban Regional Park.

The Saskatoon Fire Department requested assistance from Urban Forestry staff to assess vegetation damage and determine whether any ongoing safety concerns remained within the affected area. Following a site inspection, an Urban Forestry supervisor reported that 44 small dead trees along the pathway were identified and marked with spray paint. The overall risk was assessed as low due to the area’s relatively low level of use, the low likelihood of tree failure, and the minimal potential for injury should a tree fall. While these trees should eventually be removed to prevent them from falling onto the pathway, they do not currently present an immediate hazard to the public.

As a result of this assessment, all identified safety concerns have now been addressed, and the area may continue to be used by the public. While some visible impacts from the wildfire remain, they do not pose a risk that would warrant restricting access to the site.

Visitors should be aware that tick populations remain very high in the area. The fire did not eliminate ticks, so appropriate precautions are strongly recommended, including wearing long clothing, staying on designated trails where possible, and conducting tick checks after visiting.

To help protect public health, natural areas, and reduce the risk of future wildfires, smoking and vaping are prohibited in all outdoor public spaces owned or operated by the City of Saskatoon under Smoking Control Bylaw No. 8286. This restriction applies to all tobacco products, cannabis products, and electronic cigarettes. Open fires, campfires, and any unauthorized flame-producing activities are also prohibited. Visitors are encouraged to respect these regulations to help safeguard forests, wetlands, wildlife habitat, and fellow park users.

The burned area also presents a valuable opportunity for ecological learning. Post-fire landscapes serve as living laboratories where environmental organizations such as the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas can observe ecological succession and natural recovery processes firsthand. Over time, pioneering plants, insects, fungi, birds, and mammals gradually recolonize the site, demonstrating the resilience of natural ecosystems. Monitoring these changes can provide important information about biodiversity recovery, soil health, habitat restoration, carbon storage, and climate adaptation. Such areas also offer meaningful educational opportunities, helping visitors understand the role that fire can play in ecosystem renewal and fostering a deeper appreciation for the natural processes that shape and sustain healthy landscapes.

Previous posts about the grass fire.

Grass Fire Monitoring Continues Amid Extreme Dry Conditions

Grass and Brush Fire Response Underway

Understanding Wildfire Risk: The 30-30-30 Rule

When it comes to predicting how aggressively a wildfire will behave, Canadian firefighters and meteorologists look for a critical atmospheric tipping point known as the “crossover” effect. This danger zone is easily remembered by the 30-30-30 rule of thumb, which identifies the exact combination of weather conditions that cause small fires to rapidly explode out of control.

The rule states that wildfire danger reaches extreme levels when three specific conditions are met simultaneously:

  • Temperature: 30°C or higher.
  • Relative Humidity: 30% or lower.
  • Wind Speed: 30 km/h or faster.

Why This Combination is So Dangerous

When the air becomes that hot and dry, it acts like a sponge, rapidly evaporating moisture from forest vegetation, grass, and soil. This creates a massive amount of highly flammable fuel. Once you add sustained wind speeds of 30 km/h into the mix, a spark can instantly turn into an intense, fast-moving blaze. The wind not only supplies oxygen to the flames but also carries burning embers far ahead of the main fire line, igniting new flare-ups and making containment incredibly difficult for emergency crews.

When a region hits this “crossover” threshold, fire safety officials go on high alert, as any new ignition has the potential to become an unmanageable wildfire.

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Coming soon the Clavet Memorial Healing Forest honouring the Humboldt Broncos

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”Richard St. Barbe Baker

Future Forward: When Prairie Ecology Meets Digital Innovation

Anna Sanjeev’s Award-Winning Vision for Climate, Community, and Coding

In Saskatoon’s wide-open prairie landscape—where urban forests meet wetlands and grasslands stretch toward the horizon—innovation does not always look like a laboratory or a lecture hall. Sometimes it looks like a student standing beside a patch of invasive grass explaining ecological change. Sometimes it looks like code running quietly on a tablet during a school volleyball game. And sometimes, it looks like both at once.

This is the story of Future Forward: Coding for Climate and Community – When Prairie Ecology Meets Digital Innovation,” the youth-led initiative by Annapoorni “Anna” Sanjeev, now recognized with the 2026 RCE Saskatchewan Award for Achievement in Education for Sustainable Development.

A Prairie Classroom Without Walls

At the heart of Anna’s work lies a simple but powerful idea: learning about sustainability should not be confined to textbooks.

Her journey began in Saskatoon’s afforestation landscapes, including the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area and the George Genereux Urban Regional Park, living ecosystems where prairie ecology, biodiversity, and community stewardship intersect.

Here, Anna developed a scientific educational display focused on Smooth Brome, an invasive grass species that threatens native prairie biodiversity by outcompeting local grasses and altering habitat structure. Presented during a community lecture hosted with the Saskatchewan Environmental Society and the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc., the display translated ecological science into something accessible, visual, and urgent.

With guidance from ecologist Dr. Eric Lamb and community educators, the message was clear: prairie ecosystems are not static landscapes—they are living systems under pressure, requiring awareness, care, and action.

Where Ecology Meets Code

What sets this project apart is its second story—one that unfolds not in the grasslands, but in lines of code.

Alongside her environmental work, Anna designed a digital sports scorekeeping application for volleyball, basketball, and badminton. Built using core programming concepts such as object-oriented design and data management, the app replaces paper-based score sheets with a streamlined digital system.

The environmental connection is subtle but meaningful: fewer paper records, improved efficiency, and a demonstration that everyday systems can be reimagined for sustainability.

Tested in real community settings, the app bridges technology and local sport culture, showing that innovation does not need to be large-scale to be impactful—it just needs to be thoughtful.

Learning Beyond the Classroom

Anna’s project embodies Education for Sustainable Development in its fullest sense—learning that is interdisciplinary, applied, and rooted in community.

Her work spans:

  • Environmental science education through invasive species awareness
  • Public engagement through presentations and ecological displays
  • Digital innovation through app development
  • Professional experience through a software internship with Saskatoon-based TeamLinkt
  • Creative storytelling through videos, outreach, and interactive learning tools

Each component reinforces the others, forming a model of learning that is active rather than passive, and connected rather than isolated.

A Story of Connections

The prairie landscapes that anchor this project are not just ecological spaces—they are cultural and historical ones as well. Within the broader narrative of Saskatoon’s green spaces, stories of resilience, health, and community intersect. From public health pioneers to modern environmental educators, the region reflects a long tradition of linking human well-being with healthy environments.

Anna’s work extends this tradition into the digital age, where sustainability is not only practiced in the field but also communicated through screens, apps, and online platforms.

Advancing the Global Goals

This award-winning initiative contributes directly to multiple United Nations Sustainable Development Goals:

  • SDG 4 – Quality Education through hands-on STEM and environmental learning
  • SDG 9 – Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure through app development and digital tools
  • SDG 12 – Responsible Consumption and Production through reduced paper use
  • SDG 13 – Climate Action through invasive species education and ecosystem awareness
  • SDG 15 – Life on Land through biodiversity conservation and prairie stewardship
  • SDG 17 – Partnerships for the Goals through collaboration between schools, nonprofits, and community organizations

Together, these connections show how local student-led initiatives can align with global sustainability frameworks.

Recognition and Impact

The RCE Saskatchewan Award for Achievement in Education for Sustainable Development recognizes projects that demonstrate leadership in learning for a more sustainable future. Anna Sanjeev’s “Future Forward” project stands out not only for its technical and ecological contributions, but for its ability to connect young people to real-world environmental challenges in meaningful, creative ways.

What began as a school project evolved into a community-engaged initiative—one that invites others to see sustainability not as an abstract concept, but as something practiced daily through observation, innovation, and care.

Looking Ahead

The impact of Future Forward continues to grow through ongoing community engagement, digital learning resources, and expanded awareness of prairie ecosystems. As the project evolves, it points toward a future where education, technology, and ecology are no longer separate paths—but part of the same ecosystem of learning.

In the end, Anna’s work reflects a simple but powerful truth: sustainability is not just about protecting the natural world. It is about reimagining how we live within it.

And in Saskatoon’s prairie winds, that future is already taking shape.

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”Richard St. Barbe Baker

A Seed of Change

🏆 RCE Saskatchewan’s 18th Annual Awards for Achievement in Education for Sustainable Development
https://saskrce.ca/recognition-event/

🌾 Ecological Grassland Restoration at RSBBAA – Chelsea Nyarko
From Master’s Thesis to Digital Movement: Reshaping the RSBBAA Through Global Education

The Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. is proud to celebrate the recognition of Ecological Grassland Restoration at RSBBAA, a transformative sustainability initiative led by Chelsea Nyarko and honoured through RCE Saskatchewan’s 18th Annual Awards for Achievement in Education for Sustainable Development.

This award recognizes a remarkable journey that began as a Master’s research project at the University of Saskatchewan’s School of Environment and Sustainability and evolved into a global educational movement connecting ecological restoration, citizen science, and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

At the heart of the project lies the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (RSBBAA), a 133-hectare urban forest where approximately 33.5 hectares of grasslands were experiencing ecological decline. Invasive Smooth Brome, soil compaction, and habitat fragmentation had reduced biodiversity across utility corridors beneath SaskPower transmission lines.

Using satellite imagery, ecological assessment tools, and evidence-based restoration planning, Chelsea Nyarko developed a vision to transform these degraded grasslands into vibrant native prairie habitat—a “Pollinator Paradise” inspired by successful urban restoration projects such as Toronto’s Meadoway.

🌱 Turning Research into Action

What makes this project extraordinary is its ability to bridge academic research and public engagement.

Through collaboration with the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc., scientific findings were transformed into educational resources that make restoration science accessible to everyone—from students and educators to hikers, dog walkers, community volunteers, and nature enthusiasts around the world.

The project embraced three forms of learning:

🎓 Formal Education – University-based research and sustainability studies

🌿 Non-Formal Education – Community stewardship, guided tours, BioBlitzes, and public outreach

📱 Informal Education – Interactive YouTube videos, social media campaigns, quizzes, and digital learning experiences

This innovative “Bio-Coder” approach transformed ecological restoration into a global conversation.

🌾 Building a Digital Living Laboratory

By 2026, the project had generated a growing library of educational resources, including:

🎥 Grasslands Restoration Quiz: Protect, Restore, Thrive!
🎥 The Urban Grassland Restoration Quiz: Prairie Wisdom
🎥 Where Urban Life Meets Living Grasslands
🎥 Prairie Power: How Grasslands Help Our World
🎥 Prairie Birds Brain Challenge

As well as educational articles exploring:

🌼 Native prairie restoration
🌼 Pollinator conservation
🌼 Invasive species management
🌼 Rare species protection
🌼 Citizen science initiatives
🌼 Ecological stewardship

Participants learned how native species such as Blue Grama Grass, June Grass, and prairie wildflowers support pollinators, improve soil health, and build climate resilience.

🌎 Advancing the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals

The project demonstrates how local conservation action can create global impact by supporting:

✅ SDG 4 – Quality Education
✅ SDG 11 – Sustainable Cities and Communities
✅ SDG 13 – Climate Action
✅ SDG 15 – Life on Land
✅ SDG 17 – Partnerships for the Goals

Through education, restoration, collaboration, and community engagement, the project connects prairie grassland conservation with international sustainability objectives.

🌾 A Living Legacy

The restoration framework developed through Chelsea Nyarko’s research now serves as a foundation for ongoing ecological monitoring, guided tours, BioBlitzes, citizen science projects, and future restoration activities within the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area.

Together, we are transforming prairie wisdom into lasting action.

🌾 Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc.
🌾 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area
🌾 Ecological Grassland Restoration Project

From Master’s Thesis to Digital Movement

Award Ceremony Grasslands and Slide Show

#RCESaskatchewan #EducationForSustainableDevelopment #ChelseaNyarko #GrasslandRestoration #PrairieRestoration #PollinatorParadise #BiodiversityConservation #CitizenScience #ClimateAction #SustainableCities #LifeOnLand #EnvironmentalEducation #UniversityOfSaskatchewan #PrairieGrasslands #NativePlants #PollinatorConservation #EcologicalRestoration #UrbanNature #Saskatoon #RichardStBarbeBaker.

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”

A Prairie Wetland Awakening

Sarah Diab’s Wetland Restoration Project Honoured with RCE Saskatchewan Award for Education for Sustainable Development

On May 29, 2026, at RCE Saskatchewan’s 18th Annual Awards for Achievement in Education for Sustainable Development, one project stood out as a powerful example of how research, community stewardship, and environmental education can come together to create meaningful change. The Impact of Wetland Restoration Strategies in RSBBAA, led by sustainability scholar Sarah Diab and supported by the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc., received recognition for transforming academic research into a living model of sustainability education and ecological stewardship.

The award celebrates much more than a master’s research project. It recognizes an initiative that has inspired public learning, advanced conservation planning, and strengthened community connections to one of Saskatoon’s most ecologically significant landscapes: the West Swale.

Where Ancient Waters Meet Modern Conservation

To walk through the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area is to enter a landscape shaped by thousands of years of natural history.

The West Swale, a glacial spillway carved by ancient meltwaters, forms an ecological corridor linking prairie grasslands with the South Saskatchewan River valley. Within this remarkable landscape lie approximately seven hectares of wetlands affectionately known by local naturalists as the “Soggy Patches.”

These wetlands provide habitat for an astonishing diversity of life.

Nearly sixty species at risk depend upon the corridor. Waterfowl nest among the reeds. Amphibians thrive in shallow pools. Pollinators move between native flowers. Beneath the surface, wetlands quietly filter water, reduce flood risk, improve water quality, and store carbon that helps moderate climate change.

The ecological value of the West Swale extends far beyond its boundaries.

It serves the entire community.

A Science-Based Vision for Restoration

Sarah Diab’s research focused on an important question: How can restoration efforts strengthen wetland ecosystems while avoiding unintended impacts on sensitive wildlife habitat?

The answer emerged through careful ecological assessment and a restoration framework known as the Green Ribbon approach.

Rather than introducing dense shrub plantings that could alter habitat conditions for grassland and wetland-dependent species, the project emphasizes low-growing native sedges, grasses, and wetland vegetation that support biodiversity while preserving the open landscapes required by many species.

This approach recognizes that restoration is not simply about adding plants.

It is about understanding relationships.

The Bank Swallow depends upon exposed earthen banks for nesting colonies.

The Bobolink requires expansive grasslands free from woody encroachment.

The Horned Grebe relies upon open water edges where floating nests can remain undisturbed.

Each species tells part of the ecological story.

The restoration strategy responds by listening carefully to the needs of the landscape.

Education Beyond the Research Report

One of the most remarkable aspects of the project is how it expanded far beyond the original research document.

Rather than remaining on a library shelf, the findings evolved into a diverse educational initiative reaching audiences of all ages and backgrounds.

Through videos, online learning tools, quizzes, citizen science activities, and guided tours, the project transformed technical restoration science into engaging public education.

The educational resources include:

The Impact of Wetland Restoration Strategies
Water, Wildlife, and You: The Wetland Connection
Wetland Find the Differences Challenge
How Well Do You Really Know Wetlands? Take the Quiz!
Urban Wetlands Matter — Nature Lives Here

Together, these resources form what organizers affectionately call the “Digital Swale”—a virtual extension of the wetland ecosystem that allows learners to explore prairie ecology from classrooms, homes, and mobile devices around the world.

The Digital Swale demonstrates how modern environmental education can meet people where they are while inspiring deeper connections to local ecosystems.

Learning on the Land

While digital outreach has played an important role, some of the most meaningful learning continues to occur outdoors.

The project supports hands-on educational experiences through initiatives such as the Junior Steward’s Quest, guided nature tours, BioBlitz events, and citizen science programs.

Participants learn to observe wetlands through the eyes of scientists.

They discover native plants and amphibians.

They identify signs of ecological health.

They explore the role of wetlands in supporting biodiversity and climate resilience.

Most importantly, they begin to understand that stewardship is not always about doing more.

Sometimes it is about knowing when to step back and allow nature to function as it has for millennia.

Supporting Global Sustainability Goals

The project exemplifies Education for Sustainable Development by linking local environmental action to global sustainability priorities.

Its work directly contributes to several United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, including:

• SDG 4 – Quality Education
• SDG 11 – Sustainable Cities and Communities
• SDG 13 – Climate Action
• SDG 15 – Life on Land
• SDG 17 – Partnerships for the Goals

Through biodiversity conservation, climate resilience, ecological restoration, and public engagement, the project demonstrates how local landscapes contribute to international sustainability objectives.

Community Stewardship in Action

Perhaps the greatest success of the initiative has been the response from the community itself.

Citizens have embraced opportunities to learn about wetlands through videos, quizzes, tours, scavenger hunts, and stewardship activities.

Participants have become citizen scientists.

Students have become environmental advocates.

Visitors have become stewards.

What began as a research project has evolved into a shared community effort to understand and protect one of Saskatchewan’s important natural areas.

Looking Ahead

The recognition from RCE Saskatchewan affirms the importance of combining science, education, and community engagement in environmental stewardship.

Future plans include expanded habitat restoration, new interpretive signage, stronger partnerships with schools and conservation organizations, and continued support for public learning opportunities throughout the West Swale corridor.

As interest grows in urban protected landscapes and ecological connectivity, the West Swale stands as a model for how communities can balance conservation, education, and sustainable development.

A Shared Responsibility and a Shared Hope

What makes The Impact of Wetland Restoration Strategies in RSBBAA truly remarkable is not simply its scientific contribution.

It is the restoration of relationship.

The project reminds us that ancient ecosystems still survive within modern cities and that their future depends upon our willingness to learn from them, care for them, and share their stories.

The wetlands of the West Swale continue their quiet work every day.

Water gathers.

Birds nest.

Pollinators forage.

Native plants sway in the prairie wind.

And thanks to the vision of Sarah Diab, the support of the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc., and the enthusiasm of countless community participants, the story of these wetlands continues to inspire new generations of learners and stewards.

The RCE Saskatchewan award recognizes this achievement—but perhaps more importantly, it celebrates a simple truth:

When communities invest in nature, nature gives back in ways that benefit us all.

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”

Honoured in Education for Sustainable Development:

Voices from the Afforestation Frontlines Receives RCE Saskatchewan Award

The Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (FSAAI) is deeply honoured to receive recognition at RCE Saskatchewan’s 18th Annual Awards for Achievement in Education for Sustainable Development, held on Friday, May 29, 2026. #RCESask2026

This award celebrates the international four-part webinar series Voices from the Afforestation Frontlines: Advancing Sustainable Solutions for a Resilient Planet, a collaborative initiative that brought together environmental leaders, educators, scientists, conservationists, and community advocates from around the world.

At the heart of this initiative was the inspiration and leadership of Frezer Yeheyis Tsegaye, whose vision helped transform a local conservation perspective into a global platform for dialogue, learning, and action on sustainability.

The Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (FSAAI) is deeply honoured to be recognized with an award at RCE Saskatchewan’s 18th Annual Awards for Achievement in Education for Sustainable Development, held on Friday, May 29, 2026. The recognition celebrates the impact of the international four-part webinar series, Voices from the Afforestation Frontlines: Advancing Sustainable Solutions for a Resilient Planet.

The award represents far more than a single achievement. It reflects the power of collaboration, education, community engagement, and the belief that local environmental stewardship can inspire global action.

At the heart of this initiative was the vision and inspiration of Frezer Yeheyis Tsegaye, whose passion for environmental advocacy, volunteerism, and sustainable development helped transform an idea into an international platform for learning and dialogue.

An Idea Rooted in Connection

The concept behind Voices from the Afforestation Frontlines emerged from a simple but powerful realization: the challenges facing forests, biodiversity, climate resilience, and communities are interconnected, and solutions require voices from many disciplines, cultures, and regions of the world.

As Co-Facilitator of the Women Major Group at the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), Public Advocacy and Volunteerism Director with FSAAI, and a Women 7 Advisor connected to the G7 process, Frezer recognized an opportunity to bridge local conservation efforts with global conversations on sustainability.

The result was a webinar series that brought together environmental leaders, conservation practitioners, animal welfare advocates, policy specialists, educators, researchers, and youth leaders from across the globe.

What began as a conversation about urban forests and environmental stewardship quickly evolved into an international exchange of ideas focused on creating a more resilient and sustainable future.

From Saskatoon to the World

The webinar series highlighted how local initiatives, including the conservation work occurring within the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area and George Genereux Urban Regional Park, connect directly to global environmental goals.

The four-part series explored:

  • Community Engagement in Conservation
  • Sustainable Human-Animal Interactions
  • The Role of Biodiversity in Ecological Resilience
  • Advancing Sustainable Solutions for a Resilient Planet

Each session featured distinguished speakers representing organizations and communities from Canada, Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and the United States.

Participants explored how citizen science, biodiversity conservation, ethical human-animal relationships, climate action, youth engagement, and sustainable development can work together to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time.

Education Beyond Borders

One of the greatest strengths of the series was its ability to make environmental education accessible across geographic and cultural boundaries.

The webinars demonstrated that education for sustainable development is not confined to classrooms. It thrives in community organizations, citizen science projects, urban forests, conservation initiatives, and international partnerships.

Participants learned from experts working on biodiversity protection in Bolivia, animal welfare advocacy in Africa, environmental education in Asia, urban forest greenspace protection in Canada, and sustainability policy through international organizations.

The result was a rich tapestry of perspectives that emphasized a common message: meaningful environmental action begins with education, collaboration, and empathy.

Advancing the Sustainable Development Goals

The series directly supported several United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, including:

  • SDG 13 – Climate Action
  • SDG 14 – Life Below Water
  • SDG 15 – Life on Land
  • SDG 16 – Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
  • SDG 17 – Partnerships for the Goals

The discussions highlighted how biodiversity, environmental stewardship, community engagement, and global cooperation are essential components of sustainable development.

More importantly, the webinars illustrated how local actions can contribute to international goals.

A tree planted in Saskatoon.

A species documented through citizen science.

A youth-led environmental initiative.

A conversation between experts from different continents.

Each action becomes part of a larger global movement toward sustainability.

Beyond the Webinar Screen

The impact of Voices from the Afforestation Frontlines did not end when the webinars concluded.

The project inspired a growing collection of educational resources, including interactive online quizzes, environmental awareness campaigns, citizen science initiatives, social media outreach, and educational articles designed to engage learners of all ages.

Recorded presentations continue to reach audiences through YouTube and digital platforms, extending the educational impact of the series far beyond its original audience.

The project has also helped foster new partnerships and collaborations that continue to develop in preparation for future sustainability initiatives, international forums, and environmental education programs.

A Recognition Shared by Many

While the award recognizes the success of the webinar series, it also honours the contributions of the many individuals and organizations who helped make it possible.

The moderators, speakers, volunteers, community partners, environmental organizations, and participants each played an essential role in creating meaningful dialogue and advancing environmental education.

The recognition belongs not only to those who organized the events, but also to those who shared their expertise, attended the discussions, asked questions, and carried the lessons into their communities.

Looking Ahead

Receiving the RCE Saskatchewan Award is both a celebration and an invitation.

It is a celebration of what can be achieved when people work together across sectors, cultures, and continents.

It is also an invitation to continue building bridges between local stewardship and global sustainability.

Inspired by the success of Voices from the Afforestation Frontlines, future initiatives are already taking shape. New partnerships, educational programs, workshops, and international collaborations continue to emerge, carrying forward the spirit of the original series.

The forests that inspired these conversations remind us that meaningful growth takes time.

Trees do not become forests overnight.

Likewise, sustainable development is built through patient effort, shared knowledge, and long-term commitment.

The recognition from RCE Saskatchewan affirms that education remains one of the most powerful tools available for creating positive change.

From the afforestation frontlines of Saskatoon to international sustainability networks, the message is clear: when people come together to learn, collaborate, and act, they help create a more resilient planet for generations to come.

For the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc., receiving this award is both an honour and a reminder that every conversation, every partnership, and every act of stewardship contributes to a larger story—one rooted in hope, resilience, and a shared commitment to the future of our planet.

ROOTED 2026 Conference (Resilience, Outreach and One-Health, Trees, Ecology and Diversity from the Afforestation Frontlines: Advancing Sustainable Solutions for a Resilient Planet), which expands our collective network toward an even greater global impact. Building directly on the success of the award-winning webinar series, this new initiative serves as a vital stepping stone toward major international forums, including the upcoming hybrid pre-consultation summit in Toronto this September 2026 to prepare for the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-8) in 2027. We invite environmental advocates, community leaders, policymakers, and researchers to join us in this collaborative space to share community-driven strategies, foster cross-sector learning, and advance ethical ecosystem resilience. Please visit the official event page at https://friendsareas.ca/events/ROOTED.html to register, contribute your voice, and join us on the frontlines of shaping a healthier, more sustainable, and interconnected planet.

Addresses:

Part SE 23-36-6 – Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area – 241 Township Road 362-A

Part SE 23-36-6 – SW Off-Leash Recreation Area (Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area ) – 355 Township Road 362-A

S ½ 22-36-6 Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area (West of SW OLRA) – 467 Township Road 362-A

NE 21-36-6 “George Genereux” Afforestation Area – 133 Range Road 3063

Wikimapia Map: type in Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area or

Google Maps South West Off Leash area location pin at parking lot

Web page: https://stbarbebaker.wordpress.com

Where is the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area? with map

Where is the George Genereux Urban Regional Park (Afforestation Area)?with map

Pinterest richardstbarbeb

Blogger: FriendsAfforestation

Tumblr friendsafforestation.tumblr.comFacebook Group Page: Users of the George Genereux Urban Regional Park

Facebook: StBarbeBaker Afforestation Area

Facebook for the non profit Charity Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. FriendsAreas

Facebook group page : Users of the St Barbe Baker Afforestation Area

Facebook: South West OLRA

Reddit: FriendsAfforestation

BlueSky Social

Mix: friendsareas

YouTube

Support via Zeffy

Please help protect / enhance your afforestation areas, please contact the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. (e-mail / e-transfers )

Donate your old vehicle, here’s how!  

Support using Canada Helps

Support via a recycling bottle donation and Join the plastic-recycle challenge!

United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration

““Be like a tree in pursuit of your cause. Stand firm, grip hard, thrust upward. Bend to the winds of heaven..”

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