We are excited to give back this fall to plant some conifer trees around the Tahoe Truckee basin! Sign up and come join us for a heroic day outside (through the Sugar Pine Foundation). This planting is taking place at Little Valley.
A message from the Sugar Pine Foundation:
“Come plant sugar pines in the Little Valley Fire burn scar with Patagonia Employees!
As always, we provide seedlings, planting instruction, shovels, and gloves. Please bring your own snacks, water, layers, sunscreen, and appropriate footwear. Be prepared to have FUN!”
About the Sugar Pine Foundation:
In the summer of 2004, John Pickett was working as a U.S. Forest Service technician in the Lake Tahoe Basin. That summer, John saw that most of Tahoe’s white pines – including the princely sugar pine, the world’s largest pine – were dying due to a non-native, invasive fungus called white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola). John knew that losing Tahoe’s white pines would be catastrophic for the region’s wildlife, water quality and economy; not to mention future generations of nature-lovers and recreationalists. Although blister rust is incurable in infected pines, about 3-5% of sugar pines and western white pines possess a natural genetic resistance to the fungus.
White Pine Blister Rust
John felt passionate about saving Tahoe’s forests and he knew what to do: identify blister rust resistant trees, collect their seeds, and plant the next generation. He decided to take action, and by July of 2005 he had created the Sugar Pine Foundation, a non-profit corporation dedicated to restoring the natural regeneration of white pines in the Tahoe region and beyond.
Aside from the help of invaluable volunteers, the Sugar Pine Foundation was basically a one-man operation until July of 2007, when Maria Mircheva took over as Executive Director. The organization is still small and close-knit, but the staff has grown a bit over the years. Currently with 2 permanent staff, 2 seasonal staff, and 7 members of the Board of Directors, the Sugar Pine Foundation is committed to raising awareness and fighting the threat of white pine blister rust.