Log In | Register   
HomeLocal NewsState NewsSportsOpinionObituariesAgriculture
Quick Links
  Home
  My Bulletin
  Contact The Bulletin

Marketplace
  Display Ads
  Classifieds
  Dir. of Advertisers

Opinion

Mail: Good time to adopt a cat

Mail: Wanted, class of 1943 graduates

More opinion

Ag News

UNL Short course: Invasive plants

Unapproved genetically altered wheat shows up in Oregon

More Ag News


Email Article | Print Article
News - State/Regional News
 
Forester, at your serviceTell North Platte what you think
 
Courtesy Photo­Image
Amy Seiler

Can a community forester stay busy in a plains state like Nebraska? Absolutely, said Amy Seiler, who recently became the western community forestry specialist for the Nebraska Forest Service.

NebraskaLand National BankYou've got a
facebook Request!
CLICK HERE!

Nebraska is the state where Arbor Day originated, and where residents consider trees important enough to plant several million every year.

Seiler has been busy establishing contacts with communities throughout the western two-thirds of the state.

Her goals include vigorous tree-planting programs and developing educated green industry people and dedicated volunteers – park boards, tree boards and other civic groups – who are committed to planting trees and being advocates for trees in communities.

Seiler’s office is at the North Platte Natural Resources District in Scottsbluff, at 100547 Airport Road. She can be reached at 308-632-2749. Her e-mail address is aseiler2@unl.edu.

Her geographic area is expansive, taking in all of western and central Nebraska, from the Wyoming line to the Kearney area. She also has a counterpart in eastern Nebraska, Graham Herbst, located in Omaha at Douglas County Extension Office.

Seiler’s job is to help local governments develop, maintain and improve community forests on public spaces, as opposed to working with individuals on private property. This includes evaluating a community’s current tree canopy in terms of quantity, quality, and health; developing plans for increasing the urban forest canopies, including implementing tree-planting programs; developing maintenance schedules for pruning; and organizing volunteer groups.

Designing parking lots and helping write city ordinances for trees planted below power lines or in public rights of way are some examples of specific projects.

Seiler also will assist with other programs that the Nebraska Forest Service operates under the community forestry umbrella, such as ReTree Nebraska; the Nebraska Statewide Arboretum; and conservation education.

In assisting with grant programs in western Nebraska, Seiler’s role includes attending meetings and providing feedback on ideas and plans, such as how to organize volunteers, or where to do tree plantings. She also advocates for development of sustainable landscapes such as rain gardens and bio-swales.

Seiler also will be available to provide training in Project Learning Tree, a conservation education curriculum that makes use of learning activities connected to trees and forestry. The activities meet state educational standards in a range of subject areas while encouraging clean water, healthy soil and tree planting.

She also will be involved with the Tree City USA program, which is overseen by the Nebraska Forest Service Community Forestry and Sustainable Landscape area.

Before coming to the Nebraska Forest Service, Seiler spent about two decades in horticulture and landscaping businesses. After graduating from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln with a bachelor’s degree in horticulture with an emphasis in landscape design, Seiler spent nine years in the retail nursery industry, and the past 12 years operating her own landscape design and consulting business.

Even though Nebraska is not a heavily forested state, Seiler said it is a special place to her.

“I love the high plains landscape. I love the unique plants that grow out here and the unique look that western Nebraska provides with the multitude of evergreens. I love the prairie grasses; I love that look, and the nice transition from the hardwood forest back east and start to enjoy the pines we have out here,” she said.

“A great thing about Nebraska is that in the east we have hardwood forest, which has its own look, and as we travel across the state have the best of both worlds. It transitions to cedar forest in central Nebraska, and a pine forest in the west. So we get a sample of everything, which I think is pretty unique.”


Like this story to send to your facebook

The North Platte Bulletin - Published 4/23/2012
Copyright © 2012 northplattebulletin.com - All rights reserved.
Flatrock Publishing, Inc. - 1300 E 4th St., Suite F - North Platte, NE 69101
 
Show me Talk Back during this visit
 
 

Copyright © 2003 - 2013 northplattebulletin.com
All rights reserved.

Flatrock Publishing, Inc.
1300 E 4th St., Suite F
North Platte, NE 69101

 
Your Ip Address - 107.22.25.119
North Platte, Nebraska