Editorial: Celebrating trees in May

Published 8:50 pm Tuesday, May 13, 2025

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May is Minnesota’s Arbor Month, an entire 31 days of appreciating trees and what they can do for our world, our community and what they can do for our spirits.

Aside from being aesthetically pleasing and a cool place to rest beneath their branches on a warm summer day, trees fulfill a vital function by pulling carbon dioxide out of the air, contributing to a healthier environment and are vital to the sustained health of the planet.

According to the Arbor Day Foundation: “Trees play a critical role in creating healthier, safer and more connected communities. They clean our air, filter our water and even slow storm surge and flooding in our cities. Trees also provide shade and cool our cities by up to 10 degrees, which can help prevent heat-related deaths in urban areas.”

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And they also contribute to the biodiversity that surrounds us and helps make up this wonderful world we live in.

But we would wager that largely, a great many of you go about your day not thinking about things like this and we’re included. Sure, you may appreciate a tree or remember the branches you scaled in your youth, but do you pay specific attention to the role trees play?

The fact of the matter is we should be paying more attention because of those aforementioned benefits and the direct effect they have on ourselves and the lives we lead.

This has become directly relevant in the face of the emerald ash borer infestation in the area.

This month, we urge you to consider planting a tree. Not only can it benefit the community, but it plays a role in the betterment of our lives. Best of all, it doesn’t have to be a chore.

Planting a tree can also be a great way for a family to spend time with each other, or start a tradition that can be handed down through the generations. It can be something service groups do throughout their community to add more to that life we walk beneath every day.

It might be easy to walk throughout Albert Lea and not think too much about the trees you walk beside, but it’s worth giving the idea some time. Albert Lea has always been about fostering its community and environment and trees have been a part of that.

We hope you take some time this month to appreciate this important part of nature and perhaps consider adding to it.