Tree Activities

Kids smiling and playing near tree

You may decide to incorporate an educational activity for children or youth during your event or encourage an activity at home. Download our Trees for Wildlife™ Event Planning Guide to find a variety of creative and scientific activities that can be adapted for people of all ages.

Example Activity from the Trees for Wildlife™ Event Planning Guide

Tree on tag in orange circle icon

Adopt a Tree

Find and select a special tree in your backyard or a nearby park or forest.

  • Sit below your tree, close your eyes and listen. How many sounds can you hear? Is the wind blowing? Do you hear birds?
  • Photograph or sketch your tree through the seasons.
  • Lie beneath your tree and look up through its branches. What do you observe from this angle?
  • Visit your tree often and at different times of the day.
  • Write the date and an observation on the back or your adoption card or in a notebook each time you visit or provide care for your tree. Has your tree changed since your last visit? Do you see any signs of animals? What’s happening around your tree?
Children crafting and painting wooden birdhouses in a garden

EcoSchools U.S.

A sustainable future begins at every EcoSchool. EcoSchools U.S. offers a certification program for elementary through secondary schools that nurture environmental learning and climate action. Students will join a global movement of over 19 million environmental leaders who are engaging in project-based and place-based learning to explore climate, biodiversity, and community-centered solutions to the climate crisis, advocating for climate justice, developing STEAM skills, making way for life and world-changing careers, and forming authentic partnerships within and outside school communities. Find the Learning about Forests and Growing a Schoolyard Forest action cards by registering as an EcoSchool today. Learn more about EcoSchools through our School Resources library.

Green Hour™

Visit NWF’s Green Hour™ for 15-30 minute nature-based play and family-friendly activities that are sure to get youth engaged in outdoor exploration!

People smiling and laughing among falling leaves
Oak leaf icon

Go On a Leaf Patrol

Go on a leaf patrol to learn more about the biodiversity where you live.

Collect fallen leaves from every kind of tree you see. You can do this by looking for leaves at home, at school, in a park or anywhere or anywhere you find them as long as it is safe. You will be amazed to see how many different kinds of leaves you find and how many types of trees there are.





Where We Work

More than one-third of U.S. fish and wildlife species are at risk of extinction in the coming decades. The National Wildlife Federation is on the ground in seven regions across the country, collaborating with 53 state and territory affiliates to reverse the crisis and ensure wildlife thrive.

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