Oboz Celebrates 2 Million Trees Planted

In 2008, Oboz Footwear of Bozeman, Mont., partnered with Trees for the Future to create the One More Tree program, which plants a tree for every pair of Oboz Footwear sold. As of today, the program has planted 2 million trees, and in celebration of the milestone Oboz will plant two trees for every pair of Oboz Footwear sold starting November 1, 2018 and running through the end of the year.

By planting two million trees Oboz and Trees for the Future have helped reforest over 1,200 acres of land and sequester over 77,000 metric tons of carbon. Most of the trees were planted in grassroots projects in five countries of East and West Africa.

“From the beginning, I wanted Oboz Footwear to help improve people’s lives,” said company founder John Connelly. “Partnering with Trees for the Future has allowed us to leverage our impact and see measurable results. Put simply, more trees is a good thing, and we couldn’t have achieved this without the support of our customers.”

In the mountains of Cameroon and Kenya, the trees are protecting soils and providing livelihoods for hillside communities in the form of fruit, livestock feed, and natural fertilizers. In the arid lands of Senegal and Tanzania, fruit trees combined with vegetable gardens are enabling impoverished families to end their chronic hunger. The Forest Gardens Approach has proven to increase farmers income by 400% and more and more farmers are joining the planting programs.

“We share Oboz Footwear’s belief in being True to the Trail, the ethical compass set on doing what we know to be best for people and our planet,” says John Leary, Trees for the Future’s Executive Director and author of the award-winning book One Shot: Trees as our last chance for survival. “Every Oboz purchase enables us to plant One More Tree – It could be a thorny tree planted in a living fence to protect a field from grazing animals, a fruit tree planted to provide oranges or mangoes for a family, or a fertilizer tree planted to bring life back to degraded soil.”