Ogle County 4-H plants trees

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OREGON — Illinois was once home to 14 million acres of trees, which included a unique ecosystem called an oak savannah. Now, the oak savannah is considered by the Illinois Forest Action Plan to be the most threatened plant community in the Midwest. A savannah is a plant community with scattered “open canopy” fire-tolerant native oak trees growing in a group.

Ogle County 4-H planted 25 oak trees at the Byron Forest Preserve to bring new life to oak-hickory trees. The 4-H Green Communities Tree Program focuses on tackling global issues at a local level.

Throughout the spring of 2025, youth in 49 counties throughout Illinois are planting oak trees on public properties in their county for a total of 1,225 newly planted trees across the state.

The 4-H Green Communities Tree Program follows the "learn-by-doing" philosophy of 4-H and is guided by the priorities of the Illinois Forest Action Plan.  This project has attracted National attention, as we have established 118 new oak savannas, with Illinois 4-H planting trees in 66 counties in just 3 years. To help support this project, please visit: https://go.illinois.edu/4hgreencommunity.