TREE TREK
Hello Tree Trekker!
Visit this special educational feature in Sunfish Lake Park – A cooperative effort of the Washington County Master Gardeners Tree Squad and the Sally Manzara Interpretive Nature Center. It follows a short, wheelchair-accessible path starting just south of the nature center, then across the parking lot and northward and eastward (see map) from a point near Trail Sign # 12 at the northeast corner of the parking lot. Information on the traditional medicinal value of some of these trees was provided by Paul Red Elk, and is shown on the page for that tree.
Part of the Tree Trek is a display of recommended shrubs to use for wildlife- friendly landscaping, you may observe these plants along the path that loops around SMINC from the east side, along the south, and to the west side of the SMINC acre. These have Tree Trek numbers beginning at #101, scroll down this page for the links with red names.
Use the QR code on the sign on the metal stake near each marked tree, select the tree number on the sign, and scroll down this page to learn more about that tree (click on one of the green names). Printed brochures are available at the nature center reception desk, and we have been doing scheduled guided “walk and talk” tours of this feature of the Park. The presentation on Fall Colors is accessible via he button below. Check our calendar for the timing of the next Tree Trek Walk and Talk.
A small group of volunteers has been working to find and identify Lichens in the Park. Check out the Lichen List page, linked via the button below this paragraph.
Select A Tree
Touch or click its number/name in the list below.
Shrubs recommended for wildlife-friendly landscaping start at #101
Trees of particular value to Native American Tree Medicine practice are noted as such in the details.
Shrubs Recommended for Wildlife-Friendly Landscaping
Background
In mid-August 2023, the Washington County Master Gardeners Tree Squad met at SMINC and presented a plan to create an educational “Tree Trek” in Sunfish Lake Park. A grant application was submitted to the $6.8 million Mn-DNR Community Forestry Re-Leaf program Request For Proposals. Our measly $50K project was not selected for funding, but it would have enabled the creation of a multi-lingual, multi-media, wheelchair accessible educational experience focused on many existing trees, and some additional trees to be planted, in the Park. A unique feature would be the inclusion of information about the traditional use of different trees in Native American healing practice. We also included funding to survey local educators about what content would be most useful for their student groups.
After the rejection email message (“Blah Blah NO blah blah blah”) was received, Anna, Kim, Paul, and Tony decided that the idea was too good to ignore and went ahead with a slimmed-down version, which could be the basis of a more ambitious program if and when funding is available.
With the permission of the City’s Public Works Department head Marty Powers, we placed stakes near each of 39 trees of interest along a wheelchair-friendly route about 1000 ft long, and Kim and Tony created this website page to provide access to the educational material. Each stake has a tree number and a QR code that links to this page, where there are links to a separate page for each tree. Dr. Paul Red Elk, Lakota Medicine Man, contributed the traditional herbal medicine information for many of the trees in the list.
In 2024 Deb suggested that we create a display of recommended shrubs to use for wildlife- friendly landscaping. The idea took root and you may observe these plants along the path that loops around from the east, along the south, and to the west side of the SMINC acre. These have Tree Trek numbers beginning at #101, scroll down this page for the links with red names.