Call to Action to Protect Mature and Old Growth Trees in Vermont

Dear Sunray Community and Friends,

There comes a time when each of us will receive a call from the heart (the wisdom within us) or from a source we cannot name, to act on behalf of the greater good of those we love, our communities, for Mother Nature herself. We are living in times in which we are being called to ask ourselves what world do we want to leave behind for seven generations to come and to act in whatever way we can to help shape that future.

North Pond and Telegraph Gap Area
Spectacular North Pond (foreground) and the Telegraph Gap Area from the air. Image: standing trees.org

Today, we learned of one such urgent call that we share with you that impacts the national Green Mountain Forest in Vermont…the great forest around the sacred land of Sunray’s Peace Village. The US National Forest System has announced its intention to begin a massive timber sale to logging companies of over 13,000 acres  of which 10, 855 acres are mature and old forest up to 160 years old. Given this, the Telephone Gap timber sale has been characterized by Climate Forest, a national coalition of 120 environmental groups, as one of the worst logging projects on federal public land.

Clearcut near Rochester, Vermont
Photo: David Shaw (a recent clearcut of forest near Rochester VT in the Green Mountain National Forest)

Indigenous People and folks who love Mother Earth understand the sacredness of trees and their inter-connectivity to all of life. Preserving trees, especially mature and old growth forests, is vital to our efforts to respond to the growing crisis of global climate change, which we humans continue to exacerbate because of our self-centeredness.

The nonprofit organization, Standing Trees, has put out a call to everyone who understands the importance of preserving mature and old forests for the well-being of Mother Earth, all of life, and the future we want for generations to come. You can learn about the Telephone Gap logging project by reading Standing Trees call to action and you can respond immediately (whether you live in Vermont or not, as this is a national public forest) by taking the following steps:

“We are basket weavers. We are weaving the future…There is nothing to run from. Whatever is disturbing, understand behind it is the thrill of transmutation…We are the dreamers of tomorrow…We are the parents of tomorrow.” —Venerable Dhyani Ywahoo

Sunray Ministry