Native Trees of Mission Trails Regional Park

Created by the Mission Trails Regional Park (MTRP) Foundation in honor of California Clean Air Day, this video provides an overview of some of the most common native trees at Mission Trails Regional Park, located in San Diego County. The video's host is MTRP Ranger Heidi Gutknecht, who discusses how crucially important trees are in improving air quality, and she shares characteristics about the trees and which can be grown in residential environments. In addition, Ranger Heidi discusses the trees' uses by the Kumeyaay people.
This video was funded by the Coalition for Clean Air and SDG&E and produced by the MTRP Foundation. Camera and editing by Darren Kawasaki.

Пікірлер: 10

  • @deborahhill2325
    @deborahhill23253 жыл бұрын

    Very lovely and informative presentation by Heidi. Thank you trees for all your blessings.

  • @esmeraldaduran7737
    @esmeraldaduran77372 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this wonderful information. Hope one day I have a yard to plant lots of trees and shrubs

  • @hollywillbanks
    @hollywillbanks3 жыл бұрын

    Super helpful and informative, great job! I'm redoing our front slope and will be getting some of these natives, for sure.

  • @lorrainduffy1967
    @lorrainduffy19673 жыл бұрын

    Very well done.

  • @barbhuntington4110
    @barbhuntington41102 жыл бұрын

    Great video. Can we keep leav s as mulch snd discourage taking? Thank you.

  • @lagatitabruja
    @lagatitabruja3 жыл бұрын

    Loving these videos! Would be great if you featured some Kumeyaay also 😀 Would love to know more about what the plants were used for

  • @missiontrailsregionalparkf9711

    @missiontrailsregionalparkf9711

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the suggestion!

  • @kevinfranck6520
    @kevinfranck65203 ай бұрын

    I love Mission Trails Regional Park and the effort they did for improving public access and education. But I'm disappointed in the careless way they selected their California Sycamores which are not Western Sycamores at al, but rather a back east hybrid or perhaps London Plane Tree. I'm not talking about the actual wild ones, but the ones they selected for the parking lots and camp ground & day use area. San Diego Safari Park did the same exact thing in the native plants exhibit. Somebody dropped the ball and relied on some commercial retail nursery and assumed they knew what they were doing. Same thing upstream in Santee where a back east hybrid of Cottonless Cottonwood was planted along the river trails and parks. Those trees when huge tend to get disease fat and whole large branches die enmass. Just wish the Botanist experts they used had a better grasp on their selection or better yet collect seed in pure wild areas and grew their own which is not hard to do. Still like the park, but wish better planning had been done. Same mistakes at the Walker River Walk Preserve up by Magnolia in Santee.

  • @ZacharyRiggs619
    @ZacharyRiggs6192 жыл бұрын

    Which are the best native quick growing trees/shrubs to grow for privacy that need very little water?

  • @charlesmang2834
    @charlesmang28343 жыл бұрын

    My dad is planting a lot of Lemonade Berry shrubs ( @ 7:40 ) so he does not have to mow so many weeds.