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!
As a group, we built a planter bed, and planted a variety of wildflowers and vegetables in it from seeds. We also decorated our own pots and filled them with soil and seeds so everyone had a take home from the event, and a visual reminder of the care garden. We spent money on seeds, planter bed materials, paint, soil, gloves and other gardening tools.
We had worked out a host home for the planter bed, as well as a care and watering schedule. Unfortunately it wasn't long after this that COVID hit and the entire world stopped...we made the decision to not continue caring for the small community garden at that time, and have yet had enough interest to get it up and running again. People seem to be extremely burned out and traumatized after this (still on-going) pandemic- it's been hard to get people together like we used to.
We are so excited about this project, as a group and as facilitators. It’s a shared cause that so many women joining us have expressed such deep passion about. This project is an opportunity to build and strengthen our community, give back and care for our planet, and beautify the neighborhoods we're a part of. The seed money will not only go into buying soil nutrients and tools to care for the garden but also help alleviate the financial strain of the garden on our water bill!
We're so grateful for the opportunity to create a space where women can come and care for plants, pollinators, and each other. <3