Help Restore Miami’s Forest Where You Live and Work

Getting started is easy:

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Step 1: Plant Native Trees

Native plants are the foundation of the ecosystem. They provide food and homes for wildlife and protect each other from hurricanes.

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Step 2: Remove Invasives

Invasive plants are taking over and crowding out natives. Keep them off of your property so you’re not part of the problem.

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Step 3: Stop Spraying

Your native trees won’t need any fertilizer, pesticides or watering once they’re established because they belong here. You can stop putting harmful chemicals into the environment and save money too.

Let’s go..

Step 1: Plant Native Trees

You have some great options, you don’t even need to get dirty..

Shop Local Farms

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We encourage you to visit local nurseries, it’s a great way to learn more about plants and support our farms:

If you want to keep it simple you can order online:

Buy Online

Spread the Word

Post all about your new plants on social media to encourage your friends and family. Don’t forget to tag @reforestmiami

Step 2: Remove Invasive Species

Now that you’ve planted native trees, take out the invasive ones that are threatening them

Miami’s Worst Invasives

Schefflera - Being transported by birds all over the world

Schefflera - Being transported by birds all over the world

Bischofia - All over my neighborhood

Bischofia - All over my neighborhood

Brazilian Pepper - Taking over the Everglades

Brazilian Pepper - Taking over the Everglades

Spread the word

Most people don’t even know that these trees on their property are invasive and threatening the ecosystem. Make sure to post pictures of you cutting them down with the #iaminvasive hashtag and tag @reforestmiami. Don’t forget to tell your neighbors, they probably have some invasive trees too.

Step 3: Stop Spraying

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Stop Using Pesticides

Death indeed. Pesticides are toxic, especially to kids and pets. and those bugs you’re spraying are important food for the wildlife you want. Caterpillars are food for birds and aphids are food for ladybugs. Unless you sprayed all the ladybug larvae and now you don’t have anything to eat your aphids.

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Stop Using Herbicides

Roundup causes cancer. Atrazine and 2-4-D are probably even worse. Keep this stuff out of your yard and out of your body.

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Stop Using Fertilizer

Our native plants are adapted to our soil so don’t waste your money on fertilizer. In fact, pine rockland plants are adapted to nutrient poor soil and adding fertilizer is just going to feed the weeds. Stop fertilizing and keep it out of the bay.

Congrats, you made it!

Give yourself a high five and tell us about your project on email or instagram.

We won’t reach our goals alone so it’s important that you share this website with your friends and neighbors to get them excited about reforesting Miami. And wear our t-shirt to let others know you support the cause.

Now you’re ready to dig deeper with these resources:

Homegrown National Park

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Help spread the word by getting on the map with Homegrown National Park. They’re an ambitious project to reforest 20 million acres with native plants at home. We’ve taken a lot of inspiration from their writing, they’re like a national version of Reforest Miami. Right now there are only two other map users from Miami-Dade county, help change that!

Connect To Protect Network

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Join Fairchild's Connect to Protect Network, an amazing project which is trying to connect the isolated pockets of pine rockland that we have left so that bees, butterflies and birds can connect between them and improve gene flow. Come select 5 free native understory plants upon joining, and take advantage of opportunities to participate in citizen science projects and to provide seeds back to the Network

Florida Native Plant Society

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Get involved and join the Florida Native Plant Society. Our Miami-Dade chapter has lots of great content, regular meetings, and fun field trips to local native sites. Their youtube channel has some great local content, check it out.

Learn More