The hashtag
We're using #EasterTrees across Instagram, TikTok, X, and LinkedIn. Tag us at @eastertrees on Instagram so we can reshare. The Instagram account is claimed but not yet active — the tag is yours to seed in the meantime.
Ready-to-post copy
Tap any of these to copy. Edit, paste, post. The first batch is plain language — how real people actually describe Easter Trees to a friend over coffee. Use these for personal sharing. The institutional ones below are for emails to vicars, headteachers, and parish councils.
Have you seen this? It's basically a Christmas tree but for spring — alive, decorated with edible bird food, and you plant it at Easter. The kids love painting eggs for it. eastertrees.com
Thought of you when I saw this. No pressure. eastertrees.com/for-grief.html
"The first spring, people say 'that's a nice idea.' The third spring, 'we should do that too.' The tenth spring, 'we've always done this.' That's how a tradition starts — patchy, then everywhere." — Easter Trees, 2027
A new British tradition launching Easter 2027. Every household buys a small blossom tree, brings it home for Lent, decorates it with edible bird food and a written hope, then plants it on Easter Sunday. The decorations feed the birds. You revisit your tree every year and watch it grow. The whole country blooms a little brighter each spring.
A new British tradition is hatching. Easter Trees launches Good Friday 2027 — a national planting weekend where families bring a small blossom tree home, decorate it with bird food, and plant it whenever the weekend (or the week after) lets them.
The first spring, people say "that's a nice idea." The tenth, "we've always done this." That's how a tradition starts — patchy, then everywhere.
🌸 eastertrees.com
#EasterTrees #BlossomBritain #PlantATree
Britain doesn't have a sakura season. We could.
Easter Trees launches Good Friday 2027 — every family plants a blossom tree, every Easter, until Britain blooms.
You can sign up, offer land, or back the campaign at eastertrees.com 🌸
#EasterTrees
Dear [name],
I hope you're well. I wanted to share a community campaign launching at Easter 2027 called Easter Trees (eastertrees.com). It encourages families across Britain to plant a blossom tree at Easter — taking inspiration from the Christmas tree tradition, but as a living act of renewal tied to the resurrection.
Churchyards are an obvious home for this. The campaign offers landowners a way to list their site so local families can plant there, with full control over who, when, and how. There's a "what to expect" guide for hosts at eastertrees.com/offer-land.html that covers planting day, insurance, safeguarding, and aftercare honestly.
I wondered whether the PCC might consider opening up the meadow / churchyard for a few trees, planted with our community at a time over Easter weekend (or the week after) that works for the parish. I'd be happy to bring it as an item if it's something you'd like to explore.
With best wishes,
[your name]
Dear [Headteacher],
I'm writing to flag a campaign called Easter Trees (eastertrees.com) launching at Easter 2027. The idea is simple: families across Britain plant a blossom tree at Easter, building a national blossom tradition over time.
Schools are an ideal place for this. There's curriculum content built in (pollinators, seasons, RE, literacy), the Woodland Trust offers free trees to schools, and Easter Trees has a guide for landowners covering safeguarding and aftercare honestly. A small planting on the school field with eco-club or a Year group would be a really memorable project — and the children get to come back and watch it bloom every spring.
If this is something the school might explore, I'd be glad to share more.
With best wishes,
[your name]
Dear [Councillor / Clerk],
A residents' campaign called Easter Trees (eastertrees.com) is preparing for a national planting weekend opening on Good Friday 26 March 2027, with planting traditionally on Easter Sunday 28 March. It encourages families to plant blossom trees in their communities — gardens, churchyards, school grounds, and council-managed spaces.
I'd like to ask the council to consider opening one or more council-managed sites (a verge, a corner of a park, a green at the edge of an estate) for community Easter Tree planting. The campaign provides a tree guide with appropriate native and ornamental varieties, and a "what to expect" briefing that addresses insurance and aftercare honestly.
It would be a popular, low-cost civic gesture — and one our community would notice for years to come.
Best regards,
[your name]