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Hamilton’s trees clean our air, cool our streets, shelter wildlife, and make our neighbourhoods healthier and more beautiful, yet many trees face challenges from pests, disease, extreme weather, and city growth that often go unnoticed.
The City is implementing a data collection pilot that uses sensors to gather data and to help residents experience our trees in a new way.
This pilot project is in partnership with the office of climate change initiatives funded in part through the Climate Change Reserve.
The tree sensors will measure things such as:
How wet or dry the soil is at their roots
How much water is being absorbed by the tree
How their bark expands in the heat or tightens in cooler weather and with water absorption or drought
If Trees Could Talk converts the data gathered into storytelling to help residents see and hear from trees in real time. Strengthening the bond between the community and our neighbourhood trees, helps everyone feel more connected to the tree canopy above us.
By giving trees a “voice,” we can:
Help people understand the everyday role trees play in keeping our city livable
Show how weather, climate, and care affect tree health
Inspire community to take action, like watering nearby trees during dry spells or reporting issues before it’s too late
Build stronger community support for protecting and planting more trees as part of our climate action and sustainability goals
Meet our talking trees!
As part of our community engagement, you submitted nearly 85 name suggestions for each tree and voted on your favourite ones!
The winning names are:
Acer the Carbon Eraser - Silver Maple at Victoria Park
Bark Vader - Black Walnut at Captain Cornelius Park
Hamilton’s trees clean our air, cool our streets, shelter wildlife, and make our neighbourhoods healthier and more beautiful, yet many trees face challenges from pests, disease, extreme weather, and city growth that often go unnoticed.
The City is implementing a data collection pilot that uses sensors to gather data and to help residents experience our trees in a new way.
This pilot project is in partnership with the office of climate change initiatives funded in part through the Climate Change Reserve.
The tree sensors will measure things such as:
How wet or dry the soil is at their roots
How much water is being absorbed by the tree
How their bark expands in the heat or tightens in cooler weather and with water absorption or drought
If Trees Could Talk converts the data gathered into storytelling to help residents see and hear from trees in real time. Strengthening the bond between the community and our neighbourhood trees, helps everyone feel more connected to the tree canopy above us.
By giving trees a “voice,” we can:
Help people understand the everyday role trees play in keeping our city livable
Show how weather, climate, and care affect tree health
Inspire community to take action, like watering nearby trees during dry spells or reporting issues before it’s too late
Build stronger community support for protecting and planting more trees as part of our climate action and sustainability goals
Meet our talking trees!
As part of our community engagement, you submitted nearly 85 name suggestions for each tree and voted on your favourite ones!
The winning names are:
Acer the Carbon Eraser - Silver Maple at Victoria Park
Bark Vader - Black Walnut at Captain Cornelius Park
Residents to submit fun, family friendly names for the trees.
Under Review
If Trees Could Talk has finished this stage
Name suggestion survey is closed for review. The project team will select the top 5 names for each tree, for a new survey for residents to vote on their favourite names.
Top 5 Name Suggestions Voting
If Trees Could Talk has finished this stage
A new survey to select the final names from the top 5 names suggested for each tree in the first survey.
The City of Hamilton collects information under the authority of Sections 10 and 227 of the Municipal Act, 2001. Any personal information collected for “If Trees Could Talk” initiative will be used to define the personalities and characters of the City’s talking trees and promoting the City’s environmental sustainability and climate actions strategy. Information collected for this initiative may be stored on servers located in Canada and subject to Canadian laws. Questions about the collection of this personal information can be directed to the Senior Project Manager, Capital Projects, Environmental Services, Forestry and Horticulture. City of Hamilton, 100 King Street West 14th Floor. Hamilton, ON L8P 1A2, 905-546-2424 Ext.2566, Katie.Mayne@hamilton.ca