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A kid points at a tree and says, “What is that?” and suddenly you’re talking about pollination, fungi, water, carbon, and how a forest quietly runs like a living system. We head to Millbrook Elementary School for a hands-on walk with grade three classes, turning a simple outdoor classroom tour into a practical lesson in forest ecology and Ontario nature.
We start with trees you can name right away and the surprising details most people miss: why many apple trees need pollen from a different apple variety, how bees and wind move pollen, and why corn is planted the way it is. From there we get into syrup season science, including the real sap-to-syrup ratios for maple and birch, and how those numbers connect to effort, price, and what it means to harvest responsibly.
The forest floor opens up bigger conversations. We touch on acid rain and Sudbury’s history, why limestone can help neutralise acidic lakes, and how environmental damage shows up in rocks, water, and wildlife. Then we explore everyday plants with real uses, including dandelion, plantain, stinging nettle, cattails, and sumac. That naturally leads to mushrooms, chaga on birch, what mycelium is, and the “secret language of trees” idea of underground fungal networks connecting plants.
We also talk practical outdoor tools and observations, from bird ID apps to why stormwater ponds use fountains to reduce mosquito breeding, plus what woodpeckers are really doing when they hammer on trees and even houses. If you care about outdoor education, nature literacy, conservation, foraging awareness, and the science of forest health, this is a rich listen that stays clear and grounded.
Subscribe so you don’t miss the next walk under the canopy, and if this helped you see the woods differently, share it with a friend and leave a review. What’s one “common” plant or tree you want to understand better?
By Outdoor Journal Radio Podcast NetworkA kid points at a tree and says, “What is that?” and suddenly you’re talking about pollination, fungi, water, carbon, and how a forest quietly runs like a living system. We head to Millbrook Elementary School for a hands-on walk with grade three classes, turning a simple outdoor classroom tour into a practical lesson in forest ecology and Ontario nature.
We start with trees you can name right away and the surprising details most people miss: why many apple trees need pollen from a different apple variety, how bees and wind move pollen, and why corn is planted the way it is. From there we get into syrup season science, including the real sap-to-syrup ratios for maple and birch, and how those numbers connect to effort, price, and what it means to harvest responsibly.
The forest floor opens up bigger conversations. We touch on acid rain and Sudbury’s history, why limestone can help neutralise acidic lakes, and how environmental damage shows up in rocks, water, and wildlife. Then we explore everyday plants with real uses, including dandelion, plantain, stinging nettle, cattails, and sumac. That naturally leads to mushrooms, chaga on birch, what mycelium is, and the “secret language of trees” idea of underground fungal networks connecting plants.
We also talk practical outdoor tools and observations, from bird ID apps to why stormwater ponds use fountains to reduce mosquito breeding, plus what woodpeckers are really doing when they hammer on trees and even houses. If you care about outdoor education, nature literacy, conservation, foraging awareness, and the science of forest health, this is a rich listen that stays clear and grounded.
Subscribe so you don’t miss the next walk under the canopy, and if this helped you see the woods differently, share it with a friend and leave a review. What’s one “common” plant or tree you want to understand better?

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