• How to Grow a Forest
    Jul 28 2025

    What happens when a country decides to plant a forest not out in the wilderness, but right where people live? Between Bristol, Bath and the Mendips, a quiet experiment is beginning: 20 million trees, planted through city streets, schoolyards, and farmland. Not a single woodland, but a patchwork – a forest you live inside without ever needing to visit.


    In this episode, we look at the Western Forest – how it started, what it hopes to become, and why planting trees you’ll never sit beneath might be the most human thing of all. A story about time, care, and the long, slow optimism of letting something grow.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    19 mins
  • What Happens When You Plant a Prison in a Forest
    Jul 14 2025
    This episode tells the story of Halden, a maximum-security prison in Norway often called the most humane in the world. Built among birch and pine, with no bars on the windows and no guard towers, Halden challenges everything we think we know about punishment. But this isn’t a story about crime. It’s about what happens when trees become part of the architecture of change; as living witnesses to time, attention, and the possibility of becoming something else.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    16 mins
  • The Trees That Remember: A Memorial in Berlin
    Jul 8 2025

    Some memorials are built in stone. Others are planted.


    After the Berlin Wall fell, artist Ben Wagin created a living tribute on the very ground that once divided a city – a quiet space where trees, fragments of the Wall, and engraved granite slabs stand together in memory of those who died trying to cross. It's called the Parliament of Trees, and it still grows in the shadow of power, just steps from the German Parliament.


    Tonight’s episode is about that place – what it meant, what it still means, and why choosing something living as a memorial says more than any monument could. It's about memory, resistance, and what happens when we choose life over order. Let the trees hold your thoughts, and settle in.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    16 mins
  • Pando & The Illusion of Separateness
    Jun 30 2025

    In this episode of Sleepy Seedlings, we journey into the heart of Pando — a vast grove of quaking aspens in Utah that appears to be a forest of thousands, but is in fact one single, ancient being. With over 40,000 trunks connected by a shared root system, Pando challenges the way we see individuality, identity, and connection.


    What can a forest that is one teach us about being human? Through the quiet wisdom of trees, we explore the hidden networks that bind life together — and reflect on the comforting truth that we are never truly separate. So settle in, let your breath slow, and come walk with us among the trembling leaves.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    18 mins
  • The Forest That Floated Away
    Jun 23 2025

    A rusting steamship floats quietly in the waters of Homebush Bay, just outside Sydney. Once used to carry coal and wartime supplies, the SS Ayrfield was long ago abandoned… but never dismantled. Over time, the steel hull softened. The tides shifted. And one day, a mangrove seedling found its way into the empty hold – and stayed.


    In this episode, we drift gently through the story of a ship turned forest. We’ll explore how nature returns through patience, how roots can take hold in the most unlikely places, and how even what we leave behind can become something beautiful. Let this quiet tale carry you into rest – a slow journey through rust, memory, and the soft persistence of green things.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    17 mins
  • The Tree That Owns Itself
    Jun 16 2025

    In a quiet town in Georgia, a white oak tree stands at the edge of a small rise, surrounded by stone posts and legend. According to local lore, this tree legally owns itself – a gift from a man who once loved it so deeply, he signed over the land it stood on. Nearby, a plaque still carries his words: “For and in consideration of the great love I bear this tree…”


    This episode reflects on that love, and what it means to care for nature not out of duty, but from something deeper. We explore the story of the tree, the growing movement for nature’s legal personhood, and the quiet truth that when we protect the earth, we are also protecting ourselves.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    17 mins
  • The Living Bridges of Meghalaya
    Jun 9 2025

    In the misty hills of Meghalaya, some bridges are not built… they’re grown.

    Root by root, guided by hand and time, these living structures carry people across rivers—changing, healing, growing stronger with each passing year.


    This episode is about the quiet beauty of working with nature rather than against it.

    It’s about trees, yes—but also patience, memory, and the quiet art of tending.

    Let it carry you gently from the waking world into dreams.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    18 mins
  • A Gap, A Tree, A Legacy
    Jun 2 2025

    In this special episode of Sleepy Seedlings, we travel to the windswept hills of Northumberland, where a solitary sycamore once stood in a dip along Hadrian’s Wall. Known as the Sycamore Gap Tree, it became one of the most photographed in the world — a place of stillness, of memory, and quiet meaning. And then, one morning, it was gone.


    What follows is a gentle reflection on grief, legacy, and the deep bond between people and trees. We explore how a single tree came to hold so much love, how its loss stirred something far beyond headlines, and how — in seeds, saplings, and silence — it continues to grow.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    24 mins