P.E.I.'s tree nursery trying to keep up with post-Fiona demand - Action News
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PEI

P.E.I.'s tree nursery trying to keep up with post-Fiona demand

Requests for trees from Prince Edward Island landowners, schools and community groups have "increased a great deal"since post-tropical storm Fiona, and the J. Frank Gaudet provincial tree nursery is trying to fill that demand.

'We're just trying to get some trees out to everybody,' says manager of J. Frank Gaudet nursery

Trays of tiny seedlings in a greenhouse
Demand for trees on P.E.I. has grown in the years since post-tropical storm Fiona in 2022. (Rob LeClair/CBC)

Requests for trees from Prince Edward Island landowners, schools, and community groups have "increased a great deal"since post-tropical storm Fiona in 2022, and the J. Frank Gaudet provincial tree nursery is trying to fill that demand.

"I think there's more people wanting to fill in spaces [where] trees fell down ... so that's in addition to what we normally supply trees for," said Mary Myers, the nursery's manager.

Myers says most of the trees grown therego toP.E.I.'sforest enhancement program, which supplies trees to Island landowners.

Thenursery also supplies trees to the greening spaces program, which provides trees to local communities, schoolsand volunteer groups.

"There's a kindergarten group that came through here today from West Royalty, and there'll be five of those classes come throughjust to have a little tour, and they take a tree with them," Myers said, addingshe's also seen interest from various community groups this year.

'Abit of a bottleneck'

She said trees for the forest enhancement program and watershed groups across the Island are the nursery'spriorities.

If those two groups need more trees, thegreening spaces program may get fewer.

A new greenhouse with shiny steel shelves, holding no plants so far.
The nursery's three new greenhouses are intended to help produce the extra saplings needed for the federal government's 2 Billion Trees program. (Rob LeClair/CBC)

"It is starting to come to a bit of a bottleneck," Myers said."We're trying to spread [the trees] around as much as we can."

She saidthe nursery has asked groups that had large orders filled in the last few years to consider skipping a year so first-time applicants can get their trees.

The J. Frank Gaudet nursery recently added three new greenhouses to help with the P.E.I.'s contribution to the federal government's 2 Billion Trees Program, which aims to plant twobillion trees in Canada by 2031.

No such thing as a 'bulletproof tree'

Myers said the nursery triesto grow a diverse selection of trees to keep pace with the varied requests from the public, including softwoods, hardwoods and the shrubs needed bywatershed groups.

Fiona knocked downa large number of white spruce trees, which have shallow roots that makethem vulnerable to severe weather.

"White spruce is a fairly important part of the natural forest, and each landowner can identify what their desires are as to what they want to plant," Myers said. "There's areas where 300-year-old hemlock ...went down.

"You can't really grow a bulletproof tree."

With files from Josefa Cameron