2025: Year of Our Community Forests
2025 is the Year of Our Community Forests. We’re celebrating trees in the wao kanaka, where we live, learn, and play.
What is a community forest? It’s a collection of trees in the wao kanaka, where we live, learn, and play. Community forests include trees in our neighborhoods, yards, parks, schools, and along our streets. They give us gathering places, shade to cool down, air to breathe, food to eat, wood for carving, leaves for weaving, and flowers for lei. Our forests help grow our communities, and we can help grow our community forests by caring for our trees, planting new trees, and learning from trees.
2025 was officially proclaimed as the Year of Our Community Forests by Governor Josh Green on January 10, 2025. The campaign is brought to you by a partnership of tree lovers, including DLNR Forestry & Wildlife and its Kaulunani Urban & Community Forestry Program, the US Forest Service, University of Hawaiʻi College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, City and County of Honolulu, Maui County, County of Hawaiʻi, Amy Greenwell Botanical Garden, Kupu, Aloha Tree Alliance, Grow Good Hawaiʻi, Trees for Honolulu’s Future, Koʻolau Mountains Watershed Partnership, TreeCovery Hawaiʻi, and other partners across Hawaiʻi.
Spotlight: Student videos for Year of Our Community ForestsK-12 Students across Hawaiʻi created videos for the ʻŌlelo Youth Xchange Video Contest under our theme, Year of Our Community Forests. We received 32 videos from students sharing their community forests, or even individual trees that shape their lives. Visit our video showcase to see all 32 videos, including nine finalists and three winners who received awards from ʻŌlelo Community Media for their creative work. |
How will you celebrate the Year of Our Community Forests?
Click any of the category buttons below to jump to your celebration of choice.
Nā Kumulāʻau: Learn about trees and the benefits they provide
Trees hold our island communities together, literally and figuratively. Trees help our environment by reducing erosion, cleaning our air and water, and capturing and storing carbon. Trees help our health by reducing heat and air pollution, reducing stress, and improving cardiovascular health. Trees help our economy by supporting forestry jobs, boosting property values, and saving energy. Trees also help our education: students with trees on campus score better on tests, have less stress, and have higher graduation rates. You can learn more about the benefits of trees through the resources below.
Why Trees? Tree benefit data from KaulunaniLearn how community forests support our environment, human health, economy, and education. Our Kaulunani Urban & Community Forestry Program has compiled statistics and references to help you research and learn about tree benefits in communities. |
Meet Hawaiʻi’s PlantsIf you’re researching plants in Hawaiʻi, start with our species profiles for canoe plants and common native species. Each profile has information about distribution and life characteristics, with references for further learning. Once you’ve checked out those species, you can learn about Hawaiʻi’s rare plants or landscaping plants with the GoNative or Plant Pono resources below. |
Go Native: Choose native plants for landscapingThis site helps you pick native species and Polynesian-introduced plants for landscaping based on your specific climate and growing conditions. By growing these species across our communities, we can create kīpuka for other native species to use as habitat and food for Hawaiʻi’s people. Go Native is a project of the Hawaiʻi Forest Institute and Grow Good Hawaiʻi. This site is now live at www.gonativeplants.org |
Plant Pono: Find alternatives to invasive plantsPlant Pono uses the Hawaiʻi-Pacific Weed Risk Assessment to determine how likely a plant species is to be invasive in Hawaiʻi. If you’re thinking of planting a particular landscape species, check it out on Plant Pono first. If it’s likely to be invasive, Plant Pono will suggest alternatives for you that are a better fit for Hawaiʻi. |
What’s your tree worth? Calculate benefits with iTreeTree benefits can be assigned a monetary value. While your favorite tree might be priceless to you, you can use iTree to calculate the specific monetary benefits associated with carbon dioxide uptake, stormwater mitigation, air pollution removal, energy reduction, and avoided emissions. Tell the app your tree’s species type, location, trunk diameter, and condition to get started. |
Hawaiʻi Backyard Conservation: Ideas for Every HomeownerThis downloadable book gives homeowners ideas for how to turn their backyards into conservation opportunities. Learn how to plant native plants, help beneficial insects, create wildlife habitat, manage stormwater, mulch, compost, control weeds, and more. |
Find Exceptional Trees across HawaiʻiThe Outdoor Circle created this interactive map to explore Hawaiʻi’s exceptional trees. Find trees on each island and click to see what makes it exceptional, alongside info including age, height, diameter, and species profiles. |
Why Hire an Arborist?Proper tree maintenance and care is a critical part of stewarding community forests. A trained, certified arborist is a professional with knowledge about tree biology, diagnosis of tree issues, safety, and proper pruning and tree care. Learn about how arborists are trained at treesaregood.org. You can find certified arborists through the Aloha Arborist Association or become a certified arborist through educational programs at institutions like Windward Community College. |
How to properly care for treesAs a tree owner, you have the responsibility to properly care for your trees. Visit Treesaregood.org to learn how to manage tree hazards and risks, address plant health issues, and prune trees. We also have Best Management Practices for invasive species to help prevent the spread of little fire ants, coconut rhinoceros beetles, and coqui frogs. |
Tips for FireWise LandscapingDesign and maintain your yard to minimize wildfire risk. Learn about planting the right tree in the right place, reducing flammable plants, and keeping a buffer around your home. You can learn more about the Firewise program through the website for the Hawaiʻi Wildfire Management Organization. |
Tree Canopy Viewer HawaiʻiYou can research tree canopy data for different parts of Hawaiʻi using our interactive map. For additional research, overlay data including heat severity, tree inventory, population, Native Hawaiian Population, stewardship organizations, income, asthma, cardiovascular disease, and more. |
Activities and Lesson Plans
K-5 Forestry Educational Activities from City & County of HonoluluLearn about biodiversity, how to measure tree height, leaf shapes, roots, and more with this colorful activity book. The book is an excellent accompaniment to learning with trees on your school campus or during a field trip to a community forest. The booklet includes an answer key for educators. |
ʻUlu Education Toolkit from the UH Mānoa College of EducationThe ʻUlu Education Toolkit is meant to support educators in incorporating lessons about ʻulu into the classroom, school garden, and formal or informal learning environments. The Toolkit is designed as an interactive online database where educators and families can search and organize materials as needed by grade, subject matter, resource type, and/or academic standard. This project is the result of a multi-year collaboration among the Hawai‘i ‘Ulu Cooperative (HUC), Hawai‘i Farm to School Hui/Hawai‘i Public Health Institute, the STEMS² Program at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa College of Education, and other community partners |
ʻUlu Curriculum from the Breadfruit InstituteThis downloadable PDF includes lesson plans targeted for 3rd and 4th graders about the cultural and nutritional value of ʻulu (breadfruit). The unit includes moʻolelo about the origins of ʻulu, coloring sheets, and learning about different parts of plants. Educators can find standards alignment descriptions within the PDF. The Breadfruit Initiative is part of the National Tropical Botanical Garden. |
Symphony of the Hawaiʻi Forests: Teaching ResourcesThe Symphony of the Hawaiʻi Forests is a music, art, and nature collaboration celebrating forests and trees in Hawaiʻi. Teaching resources about trees and forests in Hawaiʻi were compiled for this project by Mālama Learning Center. |
Community Forests Coloring PageThis printable coloring page allows your students to create their own community forest. They can use their imaginations to provide colors for the flowers and fruits of kou, ʻulu, and mango trees, or you can help them explore our website to learn about these species.
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ʻŌhiʻa Finger Puppet CraftYour students can become the community forest when you download and print this easy craft activity. Each student will cut and tape together a single ʻōhiʻa lehua blossom that will perch on their finger. If you’d like to add to your forest, you can have some of your students create native bird finger puppets that can visit the ʻōhiʻa lehua for nectar. This is a great opportunity to discuss as a class how having more ʻōhiʻa and other native plants in our communities could help create more habitat for our native animals. |
Craft Activity: ʻŌhiʻa Lehua CrownBe the queen or king of your community forest by creating your own crown. Our downloadable craft can be cut and taped together to create a crown of lehua stamen (youʻll likely need to print multiple sheets per student, depending on head size). |
Little Flora Paper Doll ActivityStudents can cut out and arrange different native plant parts into outfits for Flora. As part of the activity, make sure to learn about the plants that Flora is wearing through our species profile pages for loulu, pōpolo, koʻoloaʻula, and naupaka kahakai.
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Tree and watershed activities from Three Mountain AllianceYour students can learn about Hawaiʻi’s watersheds, trees, and plant parts from Three Mountain Alliance on Hawaiʻi Island. Their downloadable resources incorporate ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi and guiding questions for student learning. |
Pono STEAM kits from The Nest MakerspaceDownload instructions to create STEAM kit activities for your students, including several activities related to trees and community forests: making hua moa and kukui nut chalk; learning about lau and light by making chlorophyll prints; and making leaf nametags using autograph tree leaves. These kits are designed locally by Corinne Takara and come with detailed lesson plans to align your work with standards, including Hawaiian Core Social Studies standards. Download Pono STEAM kit instructions from The Nest Makerspace
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Request a classroom presentation about trees and community forestsInvite a guest speaker to talk to your students about the benefits of trees. You can use our presentation request form if youʻd like a speaker from Forestry & Wildlife, or you can contact our campaign partners to inquire about classroom presentations. You can find a full list of campaign partners at the top of this page, or jump straight to partners like Aloha Tree Alliance, Grow Good Hawaiʻi, Trees for Honolulu’s Future, and Koʻolau Mountains Watershed Partnership. |
Get a technical consult from our Shade Trees in Schools program and build your school’s campus tree resourcesThe Shade Trees for Schools program provides technical assistance to schools, aiding them in selecting the “right tree for the right place”- ensuring trees are planted with long-term health in mind. We provide educational resources to connect DOE campus communities across the state to trees already living on their campus, as well as future trees they may add to their campus ʻohana. As Kaulunani’s Campus Forester, Malia Staab visits schools to create connections to trees within communities. Passionate about native species, she encourages schools to build a relationship to place through native plant restoration on their campuses. |
Become a Tree CampusGrowing trees on campus builds pilina between students and trees and can improve students’ educational experience and performance. Kaulunani is the local coordinator for the Arbor Day Foundation’s Tree Campus K-12 and Tree Campus Higher Education programs. Learn how to become a Tree Campus and get recognition for your school’s efforts to integrate trees into your curriculum. |
Build a School Garden or participate in the Farm to School programHawaiʻi’s public schools can be home to fruit trees an other garden plants that allow your students to engage with nature and grow their own food. Learn more from the Kauaʻi School Garden Network, the Hawaiʻi Island School Garden Network, the UH College of Tropical Agriculture & Human Resources, and the Hawaiʻi Farm to School Hui. |
Activities and art from Trees for Honolulu’s FutureTrees for Honolulu’s Future provides multiple educational opportunities, including a keiki art contest celebrating community forests, and multi-sensory curricula to help students connect with threes. Their curricula are available for preschoolers and for K-2 students. |
Video: Ke Kaluʻulu: Bountiful Breadfruit Groves of KonaLearn about ancient food tree groves grown throughout the planting zones of Kona. This 5-minute video from the Amy Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden teaches students about different types of plants farmed by Native Hawaiians including kalo, ʻuala, uhi, maiʻa, and ʻulu. |
Video: How to Properly Plant a TreePlanting a tree can be one of the best things you can do for your property, the natural environment, and your community. This video from the Honolulu Department of Parks and Recreation teaches you the 10 steps to properly planting a tree. |
Videos: I Hate Trees!Watch these educational PSAs about community trees, made by Honolulu Theatre for Youth and Trees for Honolulu’s Future. Each skit explores someone who thinks they hate trees, only to find out that they rely on tree benefits more than they realized. ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Swag and Merch
Kumulāʻau: the Card GameFrom Trees for Honolulu’s Future, this new card game is about Hawaiʻi’s trees and climate change. Kumulāʻau translates to “tree” in ʻōlelo Hawaiʻi. This game explores Hawaiʻi’s trees, the many benefits they provide, the threats they face due to climate change, and their needs for growth and survival.
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Tree Stickers!Decorate your water bottle or computer with our stickers celebrating trees and the benefits they provide to communities. We have stickers featuring ʻōhiʻa, wiliwili, monkeypod, kukui, ulu, niu, and activities like carving, weaving, planting, and birdwatching. If youʻre a Hawaiʻi resident, we’ll send you 1-3 stickers for free. If you’re a teacher, we’ll send you a sticker pack for your class. Email [email protected] (and include your address) to request stickers. Type “Tree stickers” in your email subject line to help us process your order separately from our other sticker offerings for manu, kāhuli, etc. If you are a teacher also ordering a classroom poster, please send us a single email with the subject line “Tree poster and stickers”. |
Classroom PostersAdd Hawaiʻi’s trees to your classroom. The text at the bottom educates students about the benefits of trees to health, education, and the environment. Posters are free to Hawaiʻi teachers. We do not ship on Oʻahu due to postage costs, but you can pick up a poster at 1151 Punchbowl St, Rm 325, Honolulu during regular business hours, no appointment necessary. For teachers on Kauaʻi, Molokai, Maui, or Hawaiʻi Island, email [email protected] with your mailing address. If you are also ordering stickers, please send us a single email with the subject line “Tree poster and stickers”. |
Virtual meeting backgrounds & device wallpapersBring trees along to your next virtual meeting. Bring the whole forest, or choose your favorite tree or activity. You can also use our backgrounds as computer wallpapers. We have vertical wallpapers for smartphones and watches. |
Volunteer Opportunities
This calendar will be updated throughout the year. Check back often! You can also visit the Stewardship Mapping portal (STEW-MAPS) for volunteer opportunities on Windward Oʻahu and South Kona / North Kohala on Hawaiʻi Island.
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Tree Adoption, Education & Celebration Events
Spotlight: Monthly plant adoptions with Grow Aloha Grow aloha with Hawaiian native plants and heritage crops at monthly plant adoptions! Grow Aloha is a hui of plant adoption partners with monthly, recurring adoption events across Hawaiʻi. Adoption partners include the National Tropical Botanical Garden, Bishop Museum, Molokaʻi Land Trust, Maui Nui Botanical Gardens, and Amy Greenwell Ethnobotanical Garden. For adoption event details and contact information, visit growaloha.org. Some adoptions require reservations. Grow Aloha is managed by the National Tropical Botanical Garden. |
Our partners have many more events this year for tree education, celebrations, and plant sales, listed in the table below. We’ll update this table as new events become available.
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Mahalo to Governor Green, our partners in the Year of Our Community Forests planning hui, and to everyone who helps to uplift and celebrate trees!