Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area. George Genereux Urban Regional Park. Humboldt Broncos Memorial Forest. Come to Nature. Come to Life. Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestationk Areas Inc. friendsareas.ca
September 2026 | Toronto, Ontario | Hybrid Conference
Help Shape a More Resilient Future
ROOTED 2026 brings together environmental leaders, researchers, Indigenous knowledge holders, policymakers, community organizations, health professionals, educators, and sustainability advocates to advance practical solutions for a healthier planet and stronger communities.
As a sponsor, your organization becomes part of a growing international movement focused on collaboration, innovation, and action. Support now via Zeffy
Show your commitment to environmental stewardship, biodiversity conservation, climate resilience, and sustainable development.
2. Strengthen Your ESG Commitments
Align your organization with Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) priorities and measurable social impact.
3. Increase Brand Visibility
Gain exposure through conference promotions, social media campaigns, digital marketing, event materials, and ongoing outreach activities.
4. Reach Influential Decision-Makers
Connect with leaders from government, academia, industry, Indigenous communities, non-profits, environmental organizations, and the health sector.
5. Support Global Environmental Action
Help advance conversations leading toward the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-8) and other international sustainability initiatives.
6. Invest in Innovation
Support the exchange of ideas, research, technologies, and nature-based solutions addressing today’s environmental challenges.
7. Champion One Health Solutions
Promote the interconnected health of people, animals, ecosystems, and communities through collaborative action.
8. Elevate Community Voices
Help create a platform for grassroots organizations, Indigenous leaders, environmental advocates, and overlooked voices working on the frontlines of change.
9. Build Strategic Partnerships
Develop meaningful relationships with organizations and professionals committed to sustainability, conservation, public health, and ecological restoration.
10. Leave a Lasting Legacy
Your sponsorship helps inspire action, support education, strengthen communities, and create lasting environmental and social impact.
Your Sponsorship Helps:
☑ Support impactful sustainability initiatives
☑ Host an inspiring international hybrid conference
☑ Promote biodiversity conservation and afforestation
☑ Advance climate resilience and ecosystem restoration
☑ Foster collaboration across sectors and disciplines
☑ Recognize environmental leaders and changemakers
☑ Amplify community-driven solutions
☑ Strengthen environmental education and awareness
☑ Build connections between health, ecology, and society
☑ Create positive change for future generations
ROOTED 2026 Theme
Voices from the Afforestation Frontlines:
Advancing Sustainable Solutions for a Resilient Planet
Bringing together diverse perspectives to strengthen ecosystems, communities, and environmental health through collaboration and shared action.
Partner With Purpose
Your organization will be recognized throughout conference promotions and communications while helping advance meaningful environmental and social change.
Investing in Resilience, Sustainability, and Global Collaboration
The world faces unprecedented environmental, social, and health challenges. Climate change, biodiversity loss, ecosystem degradation, and increasing pressures on communities demand innovative solutions and collaborative action. Addressing these challenges requires more than individual efforts—it requires partnerships.
ROOTED 2026—Resilience, Outreach and One-Health, Trees, Ecology & Diversity—is an international hybrid conference bringing together environmental leaders, researchers, policymakers, Indigenous knowledge holders, community organizations, health professionals, educators, and sustainability advocates to advance practical solutions for a more resilient planet.
Scheduled for September 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, ROOTED serves as a pre-consultation summit leading toward the eighth session of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-8) in 2027. The conference will build on the success of the award winning Voices from the Afforestation Areas webinar series, which has brought together voices from around the world to discuss afforestation, biodiversity conservation, environmental stewardship, ethical human-animal relationships, and ecosystem resilience. Support now via Zeffy
Corporate sponsors play a vital role in creating opportunities for knowledge sharing, innovation, and collective action. By supporting ROOTED 2026, organizations help ensure that important environmental and social conversations continue to grow and reach wider audiences.
Sponsorship demonstrates a commitment to environmental responsibility, community engagement, and sustainable development. It aligns organizations with meaningful initiatives that promote healthier ecosystems, stronger communities, and a more resilient future.
Position Your Organization as a Sustainability Leader
ROOTED provides sponsors with a unique opportunity to demonstrate leadership in environmental stewardship, biodiversity conservation, climate resilience, and community well-being. Supporting the conference sends a clear message that your organization values sustainability and is committed to creating positive change.
Connect with Influential Leaders and Changemakers
Sponsors gain visibility among a diverse audience of environmental experts, researchers, government representatives, Indigenous leaders, community organizations, educators, and industry professionals. ROOTED creates opportunities to establish valuable relationships and collaborate with those shaping environmental policy and practice.
Support the One Health Approach
The conference embraces the One Health philosophy, recognizing the interconnectedness of human health, animal welfare, and ecosystem health. Sponsors help advance discussions and initiatives that promote integrated solutions benefiting both people and the planet.
Strengthen ESG and Corporate Social Responsibility Goals
ROOTED aligns closely with Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) priorities. Sponsorship provides a tangible demonstration of your organization’s commitment to sustainability, diversity, inclusion, education, and community engagement.
Increase Brand Visibility
Sponsors receive recognition through conference marketing campaigns, social media promotion, event materials, speaker sessions, networking opportunities, and post-event communications. The hybrid format expands audience reach beyond geographic boundaries, increasing exposure and impact.
Creating a Legacy of Impact
ROOTED is more than a conference. It is a growing movement dedicated to fostering collaboration, amplifying overlooked voices, and advancing sustainable solutions through collective action.
Your sponsorship helps:
• Support global conversations on biodiversity, climate resilience, and ecosystem restoration.
• Elevate community-driven and Indigenous perspectives.
• Promote education, innovation, and knowledge exchange.
• Strengthen cross-sector collaboration between environment, health, and community sectors.
• Contribute to discussions that inform future environmental priorities and international dialogue.
• Inspire the next generation of environmental leaders and changemakers.
Join Us in Building a More Resilient Future
The challenges facing our world require bold partnerships and shared commitment. By sponsoring ROOTED 2026, your organization becomes part of an international effort to advance resilience, outreach, One Health principles, ecological stewardship, and sustainable development.
Together, we can strengthen ecosystems, empower communities, foster innovation, and create lasting positive impact for future generations.
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.
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.
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 Developmentrecognizes 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
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.
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.
Join us for the webinar series entitled Voices from the Afforestation Frontlines – Advancing Sustainable Solutions for a Resilient Planet. This four-part webinar series will bring together experts, communities and the public-at-large from Canada, United States and Globally
The United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-7), under the theme “Advancing sustainable solutions for a resilient planet,” presents a timely and vital platform to explore the interlinked challenges of climate change, biodiversity loss, and unsustainable human-nature relationships. In response to this global call, Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. proposes a dynamic webinar series that brings together diverse voices to highlight innovative and community-driven approaches to conservation and sustainable living.
This initiative, promotes cross-sector dialogue, amplify grassroots action, and explore practical solutions that foster environmental stewardship and animal welfare. SDG 13 Climate Action
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
Trees with a Story: Celebrating Arbor Week and National Smile Day in Saskatoon’s Living Forests
By Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc.
What makes you smile?
For some, it is a favourite song, a visit with friends, or a sunny spring day. For others, happiness can be found in the quiet rustle of leaves overhead, the flash of a bird’s wing, or the discovery of a wildflower along a forest trail.
This year, Arbor Week and National Smile Day come together on May 31, creating the perfect opportunity to celebrate one of Saskatoon’s greatest natural treasures: the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area.
The event, Trees with a Story: An Arbor Week Celebration & Smile Day Walk, invites nature lovers, families, photographers, hikers, citizen scientists, and curious explorers to discover the fascinating stories hidden within Saskatoon’s urban forest.
Every Tree Has a Story
At first glance, a forest may appear to be simply a collection of trees.
Look closer.
Each tree represents a chapter in a much larger story—one of resilience, survival, biodiversity, and community stewardship.
Some species have called Saskatchewan home for thousands of years. Others arrived through human settlement and agricultural development. Some were deliberately planted during the Green Survival Program of 1972-73, while a few have become unwelcome invaders that threaten native ecosystems.
Together, they form a living library waiting to be explored.
Visitors on the walk will encounter towering American Elms and Green Ash trees, both species now listed on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List due to increasing threats across their native ranges.
Participants will also meet the ever-popular Trembling Aspen, whose shimmering leaves seem to dance in even the gentlest breeze, and the mighty Bur Oak, one of the prairie’s most enduring symbols of strength and longevity.
A Forest Born from Vision
The Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area and nearby George Genereux Urban Regional Park owe their existence to a remarkable vision that began more than fifty years ago.
In 1972 and 1973, thousands of trees were planted as part of Saskatchewan’s Green Survival Program, with species selection guided by the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration.
The goal was practical: protect the landscape from erosion, improve environmental conditions, and establish shelterbelts capable of thriving in the prairie climate.
What emerged over the decades was something far greater.
Today, these former nursery lands have matured into thriving urban forests that support wildlife, improve air quality, sequester carbon, provide recreational opportunities, and serve as outdoor classrooms for environmental education.
No one planting those young saplings could have predicted the extraordinary biodiversity they would one day support.
Seeking Rare Treasures
One of the most exciting aspects of the Arbor Week walk is the possibility of discovering rare and unusual species.
Participants will learn about the Red-Berried Elder, an S2-ranked species considered rare in Saskatchewan. This beautiful shrub provides habitat and food for birds and pollinators while adding another layer of ecological richness to the forest.
Even more intriguing is the possibility of finding the elusive Smooth Rose, an S1-ranked species that has not yet been documented in the area but remains a tantalizing possibility for observant naturalists.
Every walk becomes a treasure hunt.
Every observation could become an important scientific record.
The $50 Linden Tree Mystery
Adding to the excitement is one of the forest’s most enduring mysteries.
In 1984, a Linden Tree was reportedly planted somewhere within the afforestation area.
Its exact location remains unknown.
To celebrate Arbor Week, organizers are offering a $50 prize to the first participant who locates the tree and records a verified observation using the iNaturalist platform during the event.
Will this be the year the mystery is finally solved?
Only the forest knows.
Citizen Science in Action
One of the most remarkable developments in conservation today is the rise of citizen science.
Participants are encouraged to bring smartphones equipped with the iNaturalist app and help document the biodiversity of the forest.
A photograph uploaded during the walk can contribute to global scientific databases, assist researchers, document rare species, or help track the spread of invasive plants.
Citizen science transforms visitors into researchers and casual observations into valuable scientific contributions.
It reminds us that environmental stewardship is not limited to scientists and academics.
Everyone can participate.
Everyone can contribute.
Watching the Watchlist
Not every species encountered on the walk belongs in the forest.
Participants will also learn how to identify highly invasive species such as European Buckthorn, a plant capable of outcompeting native vegetation and altering habitat conditions.
By documenting invasive species through platforms such as iNaturalist, community members become active partners in conservation and ecological restoration.
Protecting biodiversity begins with knowing what belongs—and what doesn’t.
A Smile for the Future
National Smile Day encourages us to celebrate the simple joys in life.
Few experiences are more uplifting than spending time among trees.
Research consistently shows that forests improve mental health, reduce stress, increase physical activity, and strengthen our connection to nature.
The Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area offers all of these benefits while providing critical habitat for birds, pollinators, mammals, and countless other species.
It is a place where children can discover nature, families can explore together, and adults can reconnect with the natural world.
Most importantly, it is a place that reminds us of our responsibility to future generations.
The people who planted these forests more than fifty years ago may never have imagined the impact their work would have today.
The question now becomes: What legacy will we leave?
Every tree planted matters.
Every species protected matters.
Every observation recorded matters.
Every smile shared in nature matters.
This Arbor Week and National Smile Day, join us for a walk through a forest filled with stories, discoveries, and inspiration.
Come for the trees.
Stay for the smiles.
And perhaps leave with a deeper appreciation for the living legacy growing right here in Saskatoon.
Acting Locally for Global Impact in Saskatoon’s Afforestation Areas
Today, May 22, marks World Biodiversity Day, a global celebration recognizing the extraordinary variety of life sustaining our planet. This year’s theme, “Acting Locally for Global Impact,” reminds us that meaningful environmental stewardship begins within our own communities, parks, wetlands, and forests.
In Saskatoon, the afforestation areas cared for and advocated by the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas demonstrate how local conservation contributes directly toward global biodiversity goals. These urban forests are more than collections of trees; they are living ecosystems supporting birds, mammals, insects, pollinators, fungi, microorganisms, and native prairie biodiversity within Saskatchewan’s moist mixed grassland region.
The afforestation areas provide important ecological layers essential for healthy biodiversity. Towering canopy species such as native American Elm, Balsam Poplar, Manitoba Maple, Trembling Aspen, Bur Oak, Colorado Blue Spruce and White Spruce shelter birds and wildlife while stabilizing soils and moderating temperatures. Beneath them grow shrubs and understory plants including Saskatoon berry, chokecherry, red-osier dogwood, snowberry, buffaloberry, silverberry, gooseberries, currants, roses, and willow species which provide food, nesting habitat, pollen, nectar, and protection for pollinators, songbirds, mammals, and beneficial insects.
These forests also provide habitat corridors for wildlife including white-tailed deer, moose, rabbits, squirrels, owls, hawks, woodpeckers, migratory songbirds, and countless invertebrate species. Native flowering shrubs such as prairie rose, woods rose, silver buffaloberry, wolf willow, and western snowberry sustain pollinator populations critical to ecosystem resilience and agricultural health.
Biodiversity conservation also means understanding ecological challenges. Within the afforestation areas, introduced and invasive species such as European buckthorn require careful monitoring and community science participation. The Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas encourage the public to assist with observations through iNaturalist to help identify invasive species locations, monitor biodiversity, and contribute valuable ecological data supporting conservation efforts.
American Beaver, Porcupine, Red-winged Blackbird, Fawn, Mallard Ducks, Waxwing, Rabbit, Deer Chappell Marsh. West Swale Wetlands. Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area. Saskatoon, SK, CA
Several species found within the afforestation areas also carry conservation significance. American Elm and Green Ash are listed on the IUCN Red List because of threats from disease and environmental pressures. The Red-Berried Elder is ranked as a rare species within Saskatchewan. Every healthy urban forest supporting these species contributes to broader ecological resilience and conservation awareness.
Urban forests are increasingly recognized as essential climate adaptation infrastructure. Trees absorb carbon, reduce urban heat, improve air quality, retain stormwater, provide wildlife habitat, and contribute to mental and physical wellbeing for surrounding communities. In rapidly changing environments, afforestation areas become critical refuges not only for biodiversity, but also for people seeking connection with nature.
The Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas believe biodiversity protection begins with education, stewardship, and community participation. Every bird observation, invasive species report, pollinator garden, tree planting initiative, and conservation conversation helps strengthen environmental resilience locally while contributing to international biodiversity goals.
World Biodiversity Day reminds us that protecting ecosystems does not happen only within distant wilderness parks. It happens where communities choose to care for the landscapes around them. Saskatoon’s afforestation areas stand as living examples of how local environmental stewardship can create lasting global impact for biodiversity, climate resilience, and future generations.
Afforestation Area 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
Why a Grassroots Charity in Saskatoon is Sounding the Alarm on Parliament Hill—and Why the Federal Budget is Canada’s Last Line of Defense.
If you close your eyes and picture a vanishing, critically endangered global ecosystem, your mind likely drifts to the smoke-choked canopies of the Amazon rainforest or the bleaching expanses of the Great Barrier Reef.
You probably do not picture Saskatchewan.
Yet, according to international conservation scientists, the North American temperate grasslands are quietly holding a devastating title: they are officially the most endangered ecosystem on planet Earth. While tropical deforestation dominates international headlines, Canada’s native prairies are disappearing at a much faster rate.
With the House of Commons Standing Committee on Finance wrapping up its Pre-Budget Consultations ahead of the upcoming Federal Budget, a crucial deadline looms. Non-profits, advocates, and policy experts have until 11:59 PM (EDT) on Friday, May 22, 2026, to submit environmental briefs.
Among the hundreds of stacks of economic forecasts and funding requests landing on the desks of Members of Parliament, one highly focused, evidence-based submission stands out. It comes from The Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc.—a localized, community-based environmental charity that has achieved rare, prestigious accreditation through the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).
They are not just asking for money. They are bringing a legislative roadmap designed to fix a massive gap in Canada’s national biosecurity infrastructure.
“Without enforceable, coordinated national legislation for terrestrial biodiversity, the temperate grasslands—and the life they support—will continue to vanish in silence.”
A Patchwork Crisis: The Governance Gap
Canada has historically demonstrated spectacular leadership when protecting its blue infrastructure. We have robust, enforceable national frameworks for marine conservation, federally managed fisheries, and aquatic invasive species.
But when it comes to the land beneath our feet, Canada’s terrestrial ecosystems are governed by a disjointed, fragmented patchwork of provincial and territorial regulations. This lack of centralized federal authority has created dangerous regulatory blind spots during what biologists openly call the Earth’s Sixth Mass Extinction.
Consider the numbers: North American grassland bird populations have plummeted by more than 50% since 1970. This represents the sharpest, most catastrophic decline of any bird cohort on the continent. Concurrently, native pollinator populations are collapsing as native perennial ecosystems are systematically converted into shallow-rooted annual monoculture crops.
When native flora like milkweed vanishes, the specialized ecological relationships supporting species like the Monarch butterfly break completely. When foundational native flora like milkweed disappears, critical symbiotic networks—including the specialized relationships required by the Monarch butterfly—are severed. This destabilization systematically compromises other mutually dependent species throughout the ecosystem.
Compounding this loss of biodiversity is a terrifying biological threat: invasive wild pigs (Sus scrofa).
Wild pigs are widely considered by biologists to be among the world’s most destructive invasive mammals. Armed with an explosive reproductive rate, an uncontrolled wild pig population can double in size within a matter of months. Their aggressive nesting and rooting behaviors dig up wetlands, strip native grasslands, destroy agricultural crops, pollute sensitive waterways, and accelerate the spread of noxious weeds.
Currently, the fight against these animals is crippled by a lack of coordination. Because oversight is split across provincial borders, response strategies are dangerously contradictory.
For example, scientific experts—including Dr. Ryan Brook and the team at the Canadian Wild Pig Research Project based at the University of Saskatchewan—have consistently shown that uncoordinated recreational hunting actually worsens the crisis. When a hunter kills a single wild pig from a family group (known as a “sounder”), the surviving pigs scatter in panic, dispersing deeper into new territory and accelerating their geographic expansion.
Because Canada lacks a unified national eradication framework, one province’s casual hunting policies can directly undo the costly containment efforts of a neighboring province.
The One Health Imperative: Why This Matters to Every Canadian
The Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas Inc. emphasizes that this is not just an isolated environmental problem. It is a direct threat to public safety, economic stability, and human health—a concept known globally as the “One Health” approach.
Healthy, intact native grasslands function as vital climate stabilizers. Their deep, ancient root networks are highly efficient at sequestering carbon, retaining groundwater, resisting drought, and providing natural firebreaks.
As invasive species alter the landscape and native ecosystems degrade, that natural resilience against catastrophic wildfire is stripped away. The result? A dramatic escalation in fuel loads that directly threatens human settlements, mental health, increases disaster relief spending, and fills Canadian cities with toxic, dangerous smoke.
Aligned with UN Sustainable Development Goal 3 (Good Health and Well-being) and Goal 11 (Sustainable Cities and Communities), the group’s pre-budget submission argues that protecting grasslands is a fundamental pillar of disaster preparedness and human survival.
The Policy Blueprint: Two Concrete Recommendations
National Terrestrial Biodiversity Protection for Threatened Species and Species at Risk in Canada
National Wild Pig Act and Coordinated Invasive Terrestrial Species Eradication Strategy
Protection at the Canadian National Level of the World’s Most Endangered Ecosystems: Temperate Grasslands
Recommendation 1:
That the Government of Canada implement a National Terrestrial Biodiversity Protection Framework in relation to endangered temperate grasslands, invasive terrestrial species management, threatened species and habitat protections and coordinated ecosystem restoration across Canada, and allocate dedicated federal funding to ensure effective implementation, long-term protection, and measurable restoration outcomes.
Recommendation 2: That the Government of Canada amend the existing federal invasive species framework by implementing a National Wild Pig Act in relation to invasive terrestrial species management and coordinated national eradication strategies, and provide dedicated federal funding to support implementation, enforcement, monitoring, and long-term eradication efforts.
From Aspirational Targets to Real Legislation
“We must move beyond aspirational targets,” states the brief. While global initiatives like the United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030) offer a vital framework, international targets are meaningless without dedicated federal dollars and domestic legislative teeth.
The federal government has an immediate opportunity to act during this budget cycle. Treating our terrestrial ecosystems as essential national infrastructure is not a luxury—it is a clear investment in Canada’s resilience, biosecurity, and long-term climate safety.
HOW TO SUPPORT THIS CAUSE:
Submit a Brief: If you are part of an organization or a concerned citizen, you can voice your support directly on the House of Commons Finance Committee Pre-Budget Consultations Page. Submissions must be received before 11:59 PM (EDT) on Friday, May 22, 2026.
Engage Your Leaders:Share this brief with your local Member of Parliament (MP), provincial Senators, Parliamentary Secretaries, and Ministers holding portfolios in Environment, Climate Change, Agriculture, and Emergency Preparedness.
Learn More: Explore the nonprofit toolkits available through organizations like Imagine Canada to learn how community science and grassroots advocacy can drive national policy changes.
Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). (2019). Global Assessment Report on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services. United Nations.
Mayer, J. J., & Brisbin, I. L., Jr. (2009). Wild Pigs in the United States: Their History, Comparative Morphology, and Current Status. University of Georgia Press.
Pimentel, D., Zuniga, R., & Morrison, D. (2005). Update on the environmental and economic costs associated with alien-invasive species in the United States. Ecological Economics, 52(3), 273–288.
Ripple, W. J., et al. (2020). World scientists’ warning of a climate emergency. BioScience, 70(1), 8–12.
Samson, F., & Knopf, F. (1994). Prairie Conservation: Preserving North America’s Most Endangered Ecosystem. Island Press.
Beneath the canopy of our global forests, a slow-motion dialogue is taking place—a metabolic conversation between the standing giants of the timber world and the persistent, creeping network of the fungal kingdom. To the untrained eye, a mushroom is a mere ornament. But to those who walk the path of the Watu Wa Miti—the “People of the Trees”—it is a profound indicator of a landscape in transition.
Phellinus tremulae Aspen BracketSchizophyllum commune Splitgill MushroomFomes fomentarius Hoof Fungus
The Ancestral Pledge
In 1922, Richard St. Barbe Baker and Chief Josiah Njonjo founded a movement in Kenya that would ripple across a century. The “Men of the Trees” (now Watu Wa Miti) understood a fundamental truth: our fate is intertwined with the sap and the spore. Their pledge—to plant ten trees a year and do one good deed daily—was more than a conservation effort; it was an acknowledgment of our role as stewards of a living, breathing respiratory system. Today, as we navigate an era of climate instability, the health of our forests depends on our ability to read the “language of the limb.”
The Polypore: Nature’s Hardened Wisdom
Look closely at the trunk of an aging oak or a weathered hemlock. You may see a woody shelf, hard as a horse’s hoof, jutting from the bark. These are the Polypores.Unlike the ephemeral meadow mushrooms with their delicate gills, these organisms possess millions of microscopic pores. When they take on this woody, hoof-like form, we call them conks.
These structures are not merely growing on the tree; they are growing with it. A conk like Fomes fomentarius (the Tinder Polypore) or Phellinus tremulae (Aspen Bracket) adds a new layer of spore tissue each season, mirroring the growth rings of the tree itself. If you find a conk with eight distinct layers, you are looking at a four-to-eight-year history of fungal respiration. It is a biological clock, ticking in the key of decomposition.
The Art of Decay
Among these architects is the Artist’s Conk (Ganoderma applanatum). Its creamy underside is a living canvas; a gentle scratch with a fingernail leaves a permanent brown line, preserved through the drying process. But the “art” goes deeper than the surface.
These fungi are saprophytes, the grand recyclers of the planet. They target the lignin—the very “rebar” of the tree’s structural concrete. While a white-rot fungus like the Artist’s Conk leaves the wood flexible but weakened, the Common Split Gill (Schizophyllum commune) thrives on the sun-scorched, drought-stressed limbs of trees already gasping for relief.
“A hollow or dull sound when knocking on a trunk is the tree’s way of whispering its internal secrets. It tells us that the mycelium has already moved into a tree wound, claiming the heartwood for the next generation of life.”
The Inevitable Transition
We must address the uncomfortable truth: once a polypore fruits, the mycelium has already occupied the fortress. Whether the infection began via a lightning strike, a pruning wound, stress on the root or a territorial woodpecker, the decay is a one-way street. There is no “cure” for wood-decay fungi.
In our human desire to “fix” nature, we often want to rip the conks off the bark. Do not destroy the evidence. Removing the fruiting body does nothing to stop the vegetative hyphae devouring the nutrients inside. In fact, if you tear a conk away during a humid rain, you may unwittingly help the fungus broadcast its spores to the rest of the grove.
Stewardship in the Mycelial Age
To care for our forests is not to wage war on fungi, but to mitigate the stress that invites them. Wood-decay fungi are opportunistic; they are the “undertakers” of the woods, summoned by wounds from machinery, fire, and drought.
To be Watu Wa Miti today means:
Preventing Wounds: Protect the bark of your trees as you would your own skin.
Mitigating Stress: Water during droughts and mulch to preserve soil health.
Observing with Humility: Recognize that a “hazard tree” to a homeowner is a “wildlife skyscraper” to the ecosystem.
The polypore teaches us that death is simply a restructuring of energy. As the lignin breaks down, the nutrients stored from decades of sunshine and soil are released back into the web. We plant the trees, and the fungi ensure that no atom is ever wasted. In this sacred cycle, we find our place—not as masters of the forest, but as humble members of the Mycelial Collective.
To keep our forest healthy and safe, the City of Saskatoon Parks Dept. (led by Urban Forestry Supervisor Scott Kindrat) will be conducting essential tree maintenance in the RSBBA from June 9–11. Arborists will focus on removing trees marked with a painted dot—specifically those that are diseased or pose a risk of falling or fire. We appreciate your cooperation as we care for this natural space! Thank you.
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
Every spring, cities around the world come alive with footsteps, stories, and shared curiosity—and in Saskatoon, that spirit is thriving once again.Jane’s Walk Saskatoon 2026, taking place May 1–3, invites residents to slow down, look closer, and rediscover the landscapes and histories that shape their community.
Inspired by urban thinker Jane Jacobs, Jane’s Walks are not your typical guided tours. There are no scripts, no podiums—just people হাঁ walking together, exchanging ideas, and seeing their city through fresh eyes. This year’s walks, , bring a particularly meaningful focus: the intersection of urban nature, memory, and community identity.
At the heart of the 2026 program are two remarkable green spaces—George Genereux Urban Regional Park and Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area. These aren’t just parks; they are living archives of local history, ecological resilience, and civic vision. Participants will hear stories that stretch from the land’s early uses to its evolving role in a growing city.
On Saturday, May 2 at 3:00 PM, walkers gather at George Genereux Urban Regional Park organized with SOS Trees and FSAAI for an afternoon of conversation and discovery. By Sunday, May 3 at 4:00 PM, the focus shifts to a deeply reflective theme—Forest, Memory, and the City We Choose to Build—organized with the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas within the Richard St. Barbe Baker Afforestation Area. Here, the walk takes on added emotional resonance with the introduction of a proposed Memorial Healing Forest honouring the Humboldt Broncos. It’s a space envisioned not just for remembrance, but for healing, growth, and community connection.
What makes Jane’s Walk special is its simplicity. There’s no cost, no barrier to entry—just an open invitation to walk, listen, share, and reflect. Conversations unfold naturally: about trees and trails, about city planning and belonging, about the stories we inherit and those we choose to tell.
In a fast-paced world, these walks offer something increasingly rare: time to notice. Time to connect. Time to imagine what kind of city Saskatoon can become.
As the first weekend of May approaches, one thing is certain—whether you’re a longtime resident or a curious newcomer, Jane’s Walk Saskatoon 2026 is an opportunity to experience the city in a way that’s both grounding and inspiring.
Step by step, story by story, Saskatoon reveals what makes it not just a place to live—but a place to belong.
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
At first glance, the images seem familiar—quiet greenspaces, open grassland edges, and familiar wildlife resting in plain sight. But look closer. Something has changed.
This “Spot the Differences” nature challenge, created with the Friends of the Saskatoon Afforestation Areas, a non-profit environmental charity, invites readers to slow down and observe the subtle details of local ecosystems while reconnecting with the natural world. It is both a visual puzzle and a reminder that nature is always shifting—often in ways we only notice when we truly pay attention.
Within these scenes, participants may encounter a cast of prairie wildlife: the gentle Mourning Dove resting in open areas, the industrious Yellow-bellied Sapsucker marking trees in search of sap, the migratory Lapland Longspur moving through seasonal landscapes, the winter-adapted Snowshoe Hare blending into changing ground cover, and the quick 13-lined Ground Squirrel darting through grassland habitats.
Each detail matters. Each change tells a story.
A Fragile Ecosystem Hidden in Plain Sight
The Saskatoon region sits within one of the most threatened ecosystems on Earth: the temperate grasslands. Globally, grasslands have experienced extensive loss due to agriculture, urban expansion, and habitat fragmentation. In fact, temperate grasslands are widely recognized as among the most endangered ecosystems worldwide, with only a small fraction remaining in a relatively intact state.
These landscapes are not empty—they are living systems that support pollinators, birds, mammals, soil health, and water regulation. Protecting them is essential not only for wildlife, but for human well-being as well.
Connecting to Global Environmental Goals
This local nature activity connects directly to several United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs):
SDG 15: Life on Land – Protecting, restoring, and promoting sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, including grasslands and biodiversity.
SDG 13: Climate Action – Conserving natural habitats that store carbon and help regulate climate systems.
SDG 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities – Supporting urban green spaces like afforestation areas that improve ecological resilience and quality of life.
SDG 4: Quality Education – Encouraging environmental learning through hands-on observation and engagement with nature.
It also aligns with broader international initiatives, including the:
United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030), which calls for preventing, halting, and reversing ecosystem degradation worldwide.
United Nations Decade of Action for the Sustainable Development Goals, emphasizing urgent global efforts to meet sustainability targets by 2030.
Seeing Nature Differently
This is more than a puzzle. It is a reminder that ecosystems are dynamic, and that even small changes in the landscape can reflect larger environmental processes. By carefully observing what has shifted between images, participants are practicing a form of ecological awareness that mirrors real-world conservation work.
Can you see what changed in the trees? Tiny differences become big discoveries when you take the time to look.
Every detail tells a nature story. Hidden changes are waiting to be found. Sharpen your eyes, explore the outdoors, and test your vision with nature’s disguise.
Because in places like Saskatoon’s grasslands and urban forests, noticing is the first step toward protecting. Please come to the forests and discover and record real wildlife surprises with iNaturalist on your smart phone, and help to discover species at risk- you cannot protect what you do not know, and help to discover invasive species- early detection rapid response to protect the forests!