Invite pollinators to your neighborhood by planting a pollinator friendly habitat in your garden, farm, school, park or just about anywhere!
The Idea
Pollinator Partnership helps people protect pollinators to ensure healthy ecosystems and food security. The Pollinator Partnership’s mission is to promote the health of pollinators, critical to food and ecosystems, through conservation, education, and research. Their signature initiatives include the NAPPC (North American Pollinator Protection Campaign), National Pollinator Week, and the Ecoregional Planting Guides, which this page will help you to get started with in your community.
The ecoregional planting guides, Selecting Plants for Pollinators, are tailored to specific areas of the United States and Canada. You can find out which ecoregion you live in simply by entering your zip code / postal code at http://pollinator.org/guides and get your free guide tailored to the pollinators in your region. You can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build a beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists and bring them to your local native plant, garden center or nursery and then get a group together and get planting!
Invite pollinators to your neighborhood by planting a pollinator friendly habitat in your garden, farm, school, park or just about anywhere!
The Idea
Pollinator Partnership helps people protect pollinators to ensure healthy ecosystems and food security. The Pollinator Partnership’s mission is to promote the health of pollinators, critical to food and ecosystems, through conservation, education, and research. Their signature initiatives include the NAPPC (North American Pollinator Protection Campaign), National Pollinator Week, and the Ecoregional Planting Guides, which this page will help you to get started with in your community.
The ecoregional planting guides, Selecting Plants for Pollinators, are tailored to specific areas of the United States and Canada. You can find out which ecoregion you live in simply by entering your zip code / postal code at http://pollinator.org/guides and get your free guide tailored to the pollinators in your region. You can find lists of plant names that will attract pollinators and help you build a beautiful pollinator habitat! Print these lists and bring them to your local native plant, garden center or nursery and then get a group together and get planting!
Dunning Garden has a sandbox!!! The project started with a donation made by one of our gardeners, Bev, in honor of her son, Tyfian. We replaced an old raised bed that had rotting wood and built a new bed, filled it with sand and the kids jumped in! It is a go-to spot for them whenever they are at the garden. Thank you Bev, for inspiring this idea and thank you ChangeX, for the funding that enabled us to complete the project.
Dunning Community Garden is an organic garden established in 2012 with 20 raised beds. We now have 75 beds, a charity garden and a Bhutanese farmers' garden. We would like to build a pollinator garden in the open space adjacent to our garden. Our goal is to create a natural landscape that will attract a variety of pollinators and provide them with food and shelter.
Although the land we will use is largely a little bit of soil and an enormous amount of crushed brick and cement, it already supports a variety of wild grasses and flowers. We will plant a variety of Midwest plants that have high pollinator value and will bloom at various times throughout the growing season.
We will spend about $1,200 on wood to build the raised beds, soil to fill them and three hoses. We will use about $200 to buy plants. We will also transplant some flowers from the Community Garden to the pollinator beds.
We are grateful for this opportunity to start a project we have long wanted to do.