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Di: Michael T Yadrick
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The science, practice and humans of ecological restoration. We assist the recovery of ecosystems, which promises a brighter future for human livelihoods and health as well as a just transition in a warming world. Scienza
  • grove & grit restoration brief January 18, 2026
    Jan 18 2026

    grove & grit launches with local restoration in Hilltop, Dublin Bay oyster recovery, UN World Restoration Flagships, and an ecological reckoning on war, climate, and accountability — plus two essential upcoming reads from Emma Marris and Clare Follmann.

    This episode is released during the week of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr's birthday, grounding restoration work in a shared ethic of collective liberation.

    Local Action (Tacoma)

    Tacoma Tree Foundation - Green Blocks: Hilltop
    A neighborhood-based urban forestry program supporting residents with tree selection, permits, delivery, and planting assistance.
    🔗 https://tacomatreefoundation.org/green-blocks

    January 28 Webinar - "Plants as Teachers, Messengers & Climate Partners"
    A Tacoma Tree Foundation webinar with Michael Yadrick on habitat care as climate adaptation and what plants reveal about heat, water, and future conditions.
    🗓 January 28, 2026 | 12–1 PM (PT)
    🔗 https://tacomatreefoundation.org/calendar/plants-as-teachers

    International Restoration

    Dublin Bay Oyster Reef Restoration (Ireland)
    The Green Ocean Foundation is restoring European flat oyster reefs in Dún Laoghaire Harbour using broodstock baskets, volunteer maintenance, and scientific monitoring with Dublin City University.
    🔗 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/18/dublin-bay-oyster-reefs-restoration

    UN World Restoration Flagships
    UNEP and FAO recognition of large-scale restoration initiatives anchored in Indigenous and local leadership, including shellfish reef recovery in Australia under the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration.
    🔗 https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/press-release/indigenous-and-local-action-brings-back-nature-un-recognizes-three
    🔗 https://www.decadeonrestoration.org/world-restoration-flagships

    Harm & Repair

    Environmental reporting and analysis on how war damages soil, water, air, food systems, and long-term regeneration, with emerging efforts to document harm for accountability and repair.

    International Committee of the Red Cross — Environmental damage and armed conflict
    🔗 https://www.icrc.org/en/blog/environmental-damage-armed-conflict

    UNEP — Environmental risks and devastation in Gaza
    🔗 https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/story/gaza-conflict-poses-urgent-environmental-risks

    Environmental Law Institute — Environmental damage in Ukraine and paths to accountability
    🔗 https://www.eli.org/vibrant-environment-blog/environmental-damage-ukraine-and-paths-accountability

    Good Reads

    Emma Marris et al. — "Many Pasts, Many Futures" (forthcoming)
    A future-oriented exploration of species reshuffling, conservation values, and how restoration can prevent extinctions without clinging to a single ecological past.
    🔗 https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/0BE558C6B4F353F4AC57E596205C3ABF

    Clare Follmann — Scapegoat: What the Invasive Species Story Gets Wrong (AK Press, forthcoming)
    A sharp critique of invasive species narratives and how ecological fear stories can obscure deeper political and economic drivers of harm.
    🔗 https://www.akpress.org/scapegoat.html

    Music for this episode is from Grey Room "Down the Rabbit Hole" found on YouTube Audio Library.

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    13 min
  • Forest History with Jennifer Ott
    Jan 11 2026

    What happens when we trace the history of our forests? Not just through trees, but through people, policy, and place? In this episode, I talk with Jennifer Ott, Executive Director of HistoryLink.org, Washington's free online encyclopedia of history. Jennifer is an environmental historian, author of Olmsted in Seattle: Creating a Park System for a Modern City, and co-author of Waterway: The Story of Seattle's Locks and Ship Canal. She brings a deep knowledge of Seattle's reshaped landscapes; it's filled tidelands, leveled hills, and rechanneled rivers, and a lifelong commitment to accessible public history.

    We dig into HistoryLink's new Forest History Project, a wide-ranging effort to tell the story of Washington's forests through essays, oral histories, and educational curricula. Funded by the Washington Department of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, the project includes over a dozen new feature essays - from Indigenous land stewardship to timber company towns, the Douglas fir to the Northwest Forest Plan - as well as 15 interviews with key figures from forestry, conservation, and tribal leadership.

    We talk about the relationship between ecological change and historical narrative, the legacies of environmental thinkers, and how public history can shape our understanding of climate adaptation, land stewardship, and just futures. This conversation is a reminder that forests are more than trees; they're stories, struggles, and visions of what's possible.

    Resources and Links

    Forest History Project (HistoryLink):
    https://historylink.org/File/23334

    Learn more about Jennifer Ott's work
    Olmsted in Seattle: Creating A Park System for a Modern City
    Seattle at 150: Stories of the City Through 150 Objects
    Waterway: The Story of Seattle's Locks and Ship Canal

    This episode features music from The Grey Room / Golden Palms. Find more at:
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCoOTOoAbEhY-WD_XhkvJBJg

    Upcoming Event: Plants as Teachers

    I'll be giving a talk on January 28, called Plants as Teachers, Messengers and Climate Partners: Habitat Care and Adaptation in a Warming World, hosted by Tacoma Tree Foundation. As climate change reshapes our ecosystems, ecological restorationist Michael Yadrick invites us to rethink so-called "weeds" as allies in adaptation, revealing how plants respond to stress, guide our land care decisions, and help us imagine better futures. Register here:
    https://tacomatreefoundation.org/calendar/plants-as-teachers

    Support the Podcast + Connect

    Treehugger Podcast is a labor of love. If you'd like to help me cover costs and keep episodes like this one flowing, you can support the show here:

    Venmo: @myadrick
    PayPal: paypal.me/myadrick
    CashApp: $michaelyadrickjr

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    57 min
  • Urban Evolution with Liz Carlen
    Nov 29 2025

    In this episode, Michael talks with evolutionary biologist and urban ecologist Dr. Elizabeth Carlen about how cities - shaped by war, politics, religion, and everything in between - are evolving alongside the wildlife that calls them home. Liz is an urban evolutionary biologist whose research explores how human social structures, from redlining to sacred groves, shape the genetics, behavior, and survival of city-dwelling creatures like squirrels and pigeons.

    We dive into the often-overlooked ways that social histories leave their mark not just on human communities, but on the DNA of the animals that live among us. From prayer animal releases and colonial land grabs to the silent corridors of segregation - era parks, we trace how the built environment (and the power structures behind it) drive biological change.

    Together, we explore how urban wildlife, often seen as out-of-place or alien, can actually reveal deep truths about the endurance of life, adaptation, and the stories we tell ourselves about nature in cities. From the sidewalks of New York to the treetops of St. Louis and the birds of Mexico City, this is a rich and fascinating conversation on the entangled evolution of people and animals in the urban jungle.

    Episode Links

    The Conversation article: War, politics and religion shape wildlife evolution in cities

    Dr. Elizabeth Carlen's website: www.elizabethcarlen.com

    Nature Cities review article "Legacy effects of religion, politics and war on urban evolutionary biology": https://www.nature.com/articles/s44284-025-00249-3

    Stay Connected

    Explore this episode and others at treehuggerpod.com, or reach out anytime at treehuggerpod@gmail.com. Follow us on social media: @treehuggerpod

    Support Treehugger Podcast

    It takes a community to keep this independent podcast going. If you value the conversations we're having, consider donating to help cover the small but real overhead costs:

    PayPal: paypal.me/myadrick
    Venmo: @myadrick
    CashApp: $michaelyadrickjr

    Subscribe, rate, and review the show on your favorite platform to help others find these conversations. And of course, tell a friend.

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    50 min
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