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  • Portsmouth

    Pollinator Pathway Portsmouth

  • New Fairfield

    Pollinator Pathway New Fairfield

  • Ardsley

    Pollinator Pathway Ardsley

  • Amesbury

    Pollinator Pathway Amesbury Thank you for your interest in Amesbury Eco Gardeners! We are residents of Amesbury, MA dedicated to promoting the benefits and joy of gardening with native plants. Gardening with native plants is critically important, and we provide information, encouragement and support to our community so that we can expand pollinator habitat throughout greater Amesbury. Each one of us can make a difference! Planting an ecological garden is something that each one of us can do to help the world around us. Adding just a few native plants to your garden can cost very little money, will have an (almost) immediate and positive impact on the local environment, and will just as quickly bring you beauty and joy as your garden comes alive with birds, butterflies and other insects. Explore the menu at the top of this page to learn more about why gardening with native plants is so important. What you can do: Add Native Plants. Start by adding just a few native plants to your garden, porch or patio. There is always a native plant that will suit your particular situation: from flowers in a window box or container, to plants, shrubs, or trees in a front or backyard. Avoid Chemicals. Reduce or eliminate the use of pesticides, herbicides and fertilizers: these kill our pollinators and damage our soils. Rethink the Lawn. Most of our lawns are bigger than they need to be, and provide no food or shelter for our pollinators. Think about portions of your lawn that could be native plants or groundcover, instead. Leave some Leaves. Ease up on the Fall clean up-some of our most beautiful pollinators shelter in the leaves over the winter. Don’t rush into the Spring clean up-pollinators take their time waking up. Manage the Invasives. Invasives are aggressive, non-native plants that can take over entire landscapes. Learn how to identify and manage them. Turn Off Outdoor Lights. Lights left on after dark are highly detrimental to pollinators. Use motion detection timers to limit lighting to times when it is necessary. Interested in learning more? Unsure how to get started? We welcome everyone to learn about ecological gardening with us. Please reach out to us at amesburyecogard@yahoo.com with questions or if you would like to be on our mailing list. Follow us on Instagram @amesburyecogardeners The Pollinator Playground Garden 140 Friend St, Amesbury, MA 01913 The Pollinator Playground is located at the Friend Street entrance to the playground area at Amesbury’s Town Park, and was planted by members of Amesbury Eco Gardeners in June, 2025. We are excited to watch it grow! The plants in the Pollinator Playground are native to our area, are tolerant of sunny, dry conditions, support a range of insects, and flower at different times. For more information about these native plants and the insects they support, go to https://plantfinder.nativeplanttrust.org/Plant-Search , and: https://nativeplantfinder.nwf.org Pollinator Playground Plants: 1. Anise Hyssop (Agustache Foeniculum) 2. Black Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta) 3. Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa) 4. Common Yarrow (Achilea millefolium) 5. False Blue Indigo (Baptisia australis) 6. False Ox Eye (Heliopsis helianthoides) 7. Fireworks Goldenrod (Solidago rugosa Fireworks) 8. Grey Goldenrod (Solidago nemoralis) 9. Foxglove Beardtongue (Penstemon digitalis) 10. New England Beardtongue (Penstemon hirsutus) 11. Little Blue Stem Grass (Schizachyrium scoparium) 12. Narrow Leaf Mountain Mint (Pycnanthemum tenifolium) 13. Purple Coneflower (Echinacea purpurea) 14. Pussytoes (Antennaria plantaginifolia) 15. Shrubby St John’s Wort (Hypericum prolificum) 16. Smooth Blue Aster (Symphyotrichum leave) 17. Wild strawberry (Fragaria virginina) The Pollinator Playground Garden Donors Many thanks to all of our Donors who made the Pollinator Playground possible! Amesbury Industrial Supply, Amesbury, MA Denson Natives, West Newbury, MA Doug’s Tree Service, Seabrook, NH Farm and Sea, Amesbury, MA Martignetti Enterprises, Amesbury, MA Molly Janicki Horticultural Services, Newbury, MA Oakhaven Sanctuary, North Reading, MA The Monarch Gardener, Topsfield, MA Join The Pollinator Pathway Other helpful resources: Grow Native Massachusetts . A great organization with a great website. Check out their Resources page. www.grownativemass.org Wild Seed Project . Based in Maine, especially good for learning about planting from seed. www.wildseedproject.net Home Grown National Park . A national project led by Doug Tallamy. www.homegrownnationalpark.org Bringing Nature Home by Douglas Tallamy. If you are going to read only one book, this should be it. https://homegrownnationalpark.org/doug-tallamy/ West Newbury Wild and Native . An amazing local resource. www.wnwildnative.org Amesbury Eco Gardeners Creating Habitat One Plant at a Time @amesburyecogardeners amesburyecogard@yahoo.com

  • Andover

    Pollinator Pathway Andover Our mission is to promote native plantings and healthy habitats for pollinators throughout our community. Each of us can make a difference, starting right in our own yards. Joining the Andover Pollinator Pathway is easy—you can put your garden on the map by doing the following five things: • Plant native plants, including trees, shrubs, grasses, and flowers. • Reduce the use of chemical fertilizers, herbicides, and pesticides in favor of safer alternatives. • Control invasive plants • Reduce lawn size in favor of native plantings • Leave leaves in the landscape in the fall By doing so, we will improve the connections between the many natural spaces in town, creating a robust ecosystem with a greater diversity of native species. We invite your interest and involvement. Please explore the Andover Pollinator Pathway website for planting ideas, techniques that help pollinators survive the winter and thrive, and insight into why “growing organic” can benefit the whole community. Reach out to us at andoverpp@gmail.com to be added to our mailing list. Whether you are a beginner who is just discovering native plants or an experienced gardener, we invite you to participate. We will send you updates on programs, local plant sales and other items of interest. Public Pollinator Gardens Pollinator Pathway Garden at Andover High School 80 Shawsheen Rd, Andover, MA 01810 Welcome to the Pollinator Pathway garden project at Andover High School! This garden was created by interns Isabelle Galgano and Grace Jungmann with mentor Mindy Chave. The project is for Ms. Cutler’s Environmental Sustainability Internship Course. . This garden was installed to create native habitat for pollinators including butterflies, bees, moths, and birds. The interns have built a raised garden bed on the traffic island outside the Collins Center and installed native plants as advised by Walter Kitteridge. The plants were purchased from Walter’s native plant nursery called Oakhaven Sanctuary. The native plants used include Spotted Bee Balm, Wild Bergamot, Purple Coneflower, Mountain Mint, Golden Alexanders, Joe Pye Weed, Goldenrod, Frost Aster, Toothed Flat Topped White Aster, New England Aster, Hellebores, Button Eryngo, and Dwarf Chinkapin Oak. The compost/loam mix was provided free by the town of Andover, and the Andover Garden Club kindly covered the cost of purchase of the raised bed kits, which were sourced from Home Depot. The Garden Club also covered the cost of the plants. The AHS garden is the first public garden to be added to the Andover Pollinator Pathway. Congratulations to our interns for inspiring the community to join us in creating pollinator-friendly landscapes. Let’s get all of our neighbors on board to build a robust pollinator pathway through Andover! The Playstead Intergenerational Garden The Robb Center, 30 Whittier Ct, Andover MA 01810 This accessible garden was designed to bring people together in a beautiful space where Andover residents can gather for gardening and other programming. The plants in the garden are mostly native and easy to grow, encouraging residents to think about ways they can make their yards more pollinator-friendly. The beautiful design was created by garden designer Dee Secor. The garden includes an ADA compliant pathway, ADA compliant raised garden beds for produce, benches, and picnic tables. The plants are labeled, enabling residents to identify the plants in the garden. This garden is truly a collaborative effort between several community organizations and town departments. The garden is managed by Andover Elder Services and the Village Garden Club, with assistance from volunteers from Andover Youth Services, the Andover Pollinator Pathway, and other groups. The pollinator garden includes Panicum virgatum ‘Heavy Metal’ Switch Grass, Schizachyrium scoparioum Little Bluestem, Aquilegia Canadensis Columbine, Asclepias tuberosa Butterfly Weed, Chelone glabra White Turtlehead, Eutrochium (Eupatorium) perfoliatum Boneset, Geranium maculatum Wild Geranium, Helenium Autumnale Sneezeweed, Iris cristata Crested Iris, Penstemon digitalis Foxglove Beardtongue, Penstemon hirsutus Northeastern Beard Tongue, Pycnanthemum muticum Broadleaf Mountain Mint, Sedum ternatum ‘Larinem Park’ three-leaved stonecrop, Arctostaphylos uva-ursi Bearberry, Gaultheria procumbens Creeping Wintergreen, Hypericum kalmianum ‘Cobalt n Gold’ Shrubby St. John's Wort, Ilex glabra ‘Densa’ Inkberry holly, Kalmia latifolia Mountain Laurel, Spirea tomentosa Steeplebush, Vaccinium angustifolium Lowbush Blueberry. The Henderson Garden The Henderson Garden At the junction of River Road and Chandler Road Across from Fish Brook Reservation, 275 Chandler Road, Andover, MA 01810 The Henderson Garden was begun as a project of the horticulture committee of the Andover Garden Club in the early 2000’s. Today it is tended by members of the Civic Beautification Committee, who are studying the values of native and other pollinator plants. The garden measures 20x125’ and is located on town property at the junction of River Road and Chandler Road, in Andover, MA. This beautiful garden is planted with mostly native plants. The garden includes native shrubs: Symphoricarpus albus (Snowberry) and Vaccinium corymbosum (High Bush Blueberry), and native perennials: Amsonia taebernaemontana (Eastern Bluestar), Antennaria neglecta (Pussytoes), Baptisia australis (Blue False Indigo), Boltonia asteroides (False Aster), Echinacea pupurea (Purple Coneflower), Eupatorium purfoliatum (Joe Pye Weed), Leucanthemum vulgare (Oxeye Daisy), Liatris spicata (Dense Blazing Star), Lupinus perennis (Lupine), Lysimachia clethroides (Gooseneck Loosestrife), Lysimachia Punctata (Large Yellow Loosestrife), Physostegia virginiana (Obedient Plant), Rudbeckia Fulgida (Orange Cone Flower), Sedum ternatum (Woodland Stonecrop), Solidago canadensis (Canada Goldenrod), Symphyotrichum novae-angliae (New England Aster), and Tradescantia virginiana (Virginia Spiderwort). Local Native Plant Nursery Sources Always ask for straight species rather than cultivars that have been modified for larger blooms or exotic colors. Garden in the Woods 180 Hemenway Road Framingham, MA (508) 877-7630 Exclusively native. Open seasonally. Check site for availability and hours. Visit the beautiful gardens and buy plants at the nursery. Featuring an ever-increasing selection of genetically diverse New England natives. Grow Native Massachusetts 240 Beaver Street Waltham, MA 02452 (781) 790-8921 Once yearly native plant sale in early June with over 5,000 plants available for purchase. Visit the website for more information. King’s Tree Farm and Nursery 217 Washington Street Boxford, MA 01921 (978) 352-6359 Open seasonally. Check site for availability and hours. Large selection of natives, flowering trees, evergreens, and perennials. Mahoney’s Garden Center 165 Princeton Street North Chelmsford, MA 01863 Phone: (978) 251-4001 Large selection of plants, some of which are native. Look for American Beauties Native Plants (Choose straight species, not cultivars). Mahoney’s Garden Center 1609 Main Street Tewksbury, MA 01876 Phone: (978) 851-2712 Large selection of plants, some of which are native. Look for American Beauties Native Plants (Choose straight species, not cultivars). The Monarch Gardener 180 Ipswich Road Topsfield, MA Open 10-3, Fridays and Saturdays, May–July and September (check website for precise dates) Katie Banks Hone grows butterfly weed, swamp milkweed, and nearly 100 species of perennials and milkweeds native to the northeastern US, many of them are local ecotypes to Essex County, MA. Most of what she grows is propagated from seeds from local ecotype seed plots at her own property. Oakhaven Sanctuary 11 Batchelder Avenue North Reading, MA 01864 oakhavensanctuary@gmail.com Exclusively native. Open seasonally. Check site for availability and hours. A small nursery with many species for sale, all organically grown. In addition to wildflowers, ferns, sedges and aquatic plants, they have a broad selection of woody plants. Run by a professional botanist specializing in wetlands ecology and restorations. Weston Nurseries 160 Pine Hill Road Chelmsford, MA 01824 (978) 349-0055 Large selection of plants, some of which are native. Look for Weston Rewilding native plants grown in-house, and American Beauties Native Plants (Choose straight species, not cultivars). Wild Seed Project 21 Memorial Highway North Yarmouth, ME 04097 Mailorder. New England genotype seed. All seed collected in Maine. 100+ species of wildflowers, ferns, grasses and shrubs for a variety of habitats. Their magazine, Wild Seed , is a wonderful educational resource. They also have wonderful guides to native groundcovers and native trees—what will thrive in various settings and how to create groups of native plants that thrive together. Download Complete List of Local Native Plant Nursery Sources If your garden meets our Pollinator Pathway criteria please join using this link: JOIN THE POLLINATOR PATHWAY We encourage you to list your native garden on the Google map so we can see how we are growing pathways for pollinators around town! If you are new to this and would like to get some help to start you on your way to a pollinator pathway yard please fill out this form: I WOULD LIKE MORE INFORMATION/HELP For more information, email us at andoverpp@gmail.com Show off your beautiful pollinator yard or garden. Order a Pollinator Pathway yard sign. www.pollinator-pathway.org/sign Thank you to our partners: andoverpp@gmail.com

  • Passaic

    Pollinator Pathway Passaic

  • Wallingford

    Pollinator Pathway Wallingford

  • Media

    Pollinator Pathway Media Media, PA Pollinator Pathway is a collaboration between Media Borough Environmental Advisory Council, Transition Town Greater Media’s Biodiversity Group, Green Wagon project, Tree Tenders, Habitat Helpers, Native Seed Library, Bird Town, Bee City, and local residents in the greater Media area. TTGM’s Biodiversity Group was formed in February, 2022. Our mission is to educate our community about the importance of planting natives, removing invasives, restoring habitat, reducing pesticide use, and protecting biodiversity and ecosystems to mitigate climate crisis. Our first project was a video about native plants. We created a brochure , a Facebook page, and tabled at various community events to offer educational material, and met with our State legislators about the mosquito spray drift issue and the need for legislation. We collaborated with Media Borough to create a pollinator garden at the borough’s Community Center. We held a very popular Ecofest event in 2023. Additional groups, projects and initiatives sprang up in the next year: Bird Town, Bee City, Green Wagon Project, Tree Tenders, Habitat Helpers, and Native Seed Library. We were fortunate to have Doug Tallamy speak at our local library to a packed audience. Current Biodiversity Group projects include an ongoing educational campaign on the negative effects of mosquito spraying and pesticide use on insects and other wildlife, collaborating with surrounding townships and boroughs, spreading the word about the need for a Rights of Nature law, offering field trips to our members, and presenting library lectures. Our blogs are published on TTGM’s website, our Facebook page, and many other online sites, as well as online and printed newspapers, a local magazine, and Nextdoor. If you would like to subscribe to our blogs, please contact us at biodiversity@ttgmPA.org . Resources · Transition Town Greater Media Biodiversity Group · Biodiversity Group Library · Protecting Biodiversity Facebook page · Green Wagon Facebook page · Our native seed library video: Gardening for Wildlife and Beauty With Native Plants · Bee City video Blogs Blogs: (more can be found at ttgmPA.org ) · Natural Mosquito Control · Protecting Biodiversity with Native Plants · Gardening in the Age of Climate Disruption · Why Keystone Native Plants? · Solutions for Insect Apocalypse · Cicada Killer Wasps: Scary-Looking But Beneficial · The Fascinating Great Black Wasp · If You Plant It They Will Come Join The Pollinator Pathway Bee City Video

  • Hanover

    Pollinator Pathway Hanover Welcome to the Hanover Pollinator Pathway! The Hanover Garden Club Native Plant Teaching Garden 41 Grasse Rd, Hanover, NH 03755, USA The Hanover Garden Club Native Plant Teaching Garden is a display and teaching garden with a variety of trees, shrubs, berries, vines, ground covers, and perennials native to Northeastern Highlands Ecoregion. Our all volunteer club installed the garden over two seasons, and hosts native plant workshops at the garden. The garden prioritizes native plants that support bees, moths, birds, insects, and other pollinators important to our local food web and ecosystem. Plant list: Rudbeckia 'goldsturm' Clematis paniculata Eupatorium dubium, Joe Pyeweed, 'Baby Joe' Waldestinia ternata Asclepias tuberosa, Butterfly Milkweed Coreopsis lanceolata, Lance-leafed Tickseed Foxglove Beardtongue, Penstemon digitalis Hairy Beardtongue, Penstemon hirsutus Liatris aspera, Button Blazing Star Salvia azura, Blue Sage Veronicastrum virginicum, Culver's Root Learn more about The Hanover Garden Club's Conservation Inititives: https://www.hanovergardenclubnh.org Hanover Cooperative Nursery School 104 Lyme Rd, Hanover, NH 03755 Visible from the road and parking lot, the small garden at Hanover Cooperative Nursery School is located on the NE side of the building, adjacent to a fenced-in playground. Planted by Creating Habitats for Pollinators (CHP) in Fall 2025, with some financial support provided by Dartmouth College's Class of '89 Pollinator Project. Plant list: A seed mix of more than 40 species of pollinator-friendly wildflowers. The mix is comprised of 75% native perennials/biennials and 25% annual wildflowers. CHP uses annual wildflowers as a cover crop while the native plants get established. Hanover Community Garden 17 Reservoir Rd, Hanover, NH 03755 Wildflower planting in the middle of the organic Hanover Community Garden. First planted by Creating Habitats for Pollinators (CHP) in Fall 2024 and expanded in Fall 2025. Additional support was provided by Dartmouth College's Class of '89 Pollinator Project. Plant list: A seed mix of more than 50 species of pollinator-friendly wildflowers. The mix is comprised of 75% native perennials/biennials and 25% annual wildflowers. CHP uses annual wildflowers as a cover crop while the native plants get established. Join The Pollinator Pathway

  • Lyme NH

    Pollinator Pathway Lyme NH Photo credits: Northern Woodlands magazine staff After: The Lawn has been replaced by hundreds of pollinator plants grown primarily from seed. Before: Lawn dominated the front of our headquarters. Northern Woodlands Pollinator Garden By Nancy Farwell Northern Woodlands publishes a quarterly magazine that focuses on stewardship of the northeastern forests. We thought we should bring this concept to our headquarters by stewarding a native plant garden instead of a lawn. In 2024, thanks to the Jack & Dorothy Byrne Foundation, the Lyme Foundation, The Utility Club of Lyme, as well as generous neighbors, we were able to realize this dream! The first phase of our pollinator garden installation involved removing sod and laying gravel paths. Because the garden is an educational space and open to the public, safe access was a concern and focus. The decision to construct smooth, gravel pathways drove the installation process which involved hiring a contractor to remove unwanted shrubs and sod and build the paths. We did not amend the topsoil. Once the plants were installed, 3-4” of wood chips were spread to suppress weeds, hold moisture and give the garden beds a tidy appearance while the plants grew. The garden was designed by me – I have a degree in landscape architecture. As part of an ecological landscape design class, the students were challenged to design a native plant garden. I presented the idea of taking up the whole lawn to my former director who loved the idea and the project took off from there. The garden was installed and planted in summer 2024. I did most of the planting with help from Northern Woodlands staff, my daughters, kids of other staff members, and a volunteer or two. Plant selection was based on having a long bloom period from early spring to late autumn. I wanted lots of color, varying heights, textures, and plant shapes. I incorporated big swathes of the same plants throughout the garden, and it now includes about 50 different species. Most of the plants were started from seed and that turned out to be a fun, successful, and very cost-effective process. The seeds were started in March and April for July planting. Some of our favorite plants: Spotted bee balm - I love the unique stacked flower stalk and how the bracts change from green to white to pink. Very lovely overall. Upland white goldenrod - a nice low, mounding plant with small daisy-like white flowers. I highly recommend it. Rattlesnake master - Besides having a great name, this interesting species looks like narrow-leaved yucca with tall branching flower stems and spiky, round, dull green/white flower pods. Beardtongues - I planted the hairy and foxglove beardtongues. They started blooming in late May and produced flowers for at least a month. The tubular blossoms, white on foxglove and lavender on hairy, attract bees who wiggle their way in where you can’t see them, but you can hear them! Given that the garden is very prominent and visible to the public, we wanted to show intention with “Cues to Care.” Well-defined, gravel pathways are edged with 4-5” stones and wood chips in the planting beds create a tidy appearance. A few stepping stones in some larger beds indicate where one can walk to reach the inner portion of the bed. The transition back to lawn is a defined edge. There are large sweeps of the same species indicating intentional planting as do labels naming each plant species. Benches (photo left, below) were placed around the garden to invite one to stop and watch for pollinators and appreciate the beauty of the space. The garden has minimal weeds, and the path is kept clear of debris, demonstrating to our neighbors and community that the garden is a proud achievement and we intend for it to be beautiful in all seasons. We have attracted so many interesting pollinators including hummingbird pairs and monarch butterflies. The hummingbirds were battling over the cardinal flower. Monarch butterflies were numerous and a neighbor reported it was the first summer she’d seen a monarch since moving in 10 years ago! We had a visiting tree frog, a crab spider defending its prey from interested flies, and an enormous fly that looked like a wasp. It has been so rewarding to see such variety and quantity in the pollinators attracted to the garden, as well as the positive reactions of passersby. All this beauty and activity and no lawn to mow anymore! Nancy Farwell is the Circulation and Ad Sales Coordinator for Northern Woodlands Magazine. Nancy’s background in design, library science, and education lends well to her role as advertising ace, information curator, and community outreach champion. Nancy is an avid knitter and side gig crafter who enjoys downtime outdoors to walk, hike, or XC ski. Photo credits: Northern Woodlands magazine staff. Join The Pollinator Pathway

  • Islip

    Pollinator Pathway Islip Township Welcome to the Town of Islip, NY – Pollinator’s Pathway! The Town of Islip is the 3rd largest Township in the state of New York and consists of the cities of Bay Shore, Bayport, Baywood, Bohemia, Brentwood, Central Islip, East Islip, Fire Island, Great River, Hauppauge, Holbrook, Holtsville, Islip, Islip Terrace, Kismet, Lake Ronkonkoma, Lonlyville, North Bay Shore, North Great River, Oak Beach-Captree, Oakdale, Ronkonkoma, Sayville, West Bay Shore, West Islip, West Sayville, Brightwaters, Islandia, Ocean Beach and Saltaire. The Town of Islip Pollinator’s Pathway Group is part of the Suffolk Alliance for Pollinators (SAP). SAP is a coalition of local groups whose goal is to make Suffolk County a greener pollinator corridor through good gardening practices. The goal of SAP is to amplify the efforts of many groups helping residents, towns and communities become part of the growing regional initiative led by the Pollinator Pathway. SAP will work to make Suffolk County gardens pollinator-friendly by creating habitats and food sources for bees, butterflies, hummingbirds, and other pollinating insects and wildlife. SAP will promote pollinator-safe environments by educating home gardeners about new approaches to lawn care, promoting cultivation of native plants, fostering gardening best practices, and avoiding pesticides. This coalition will undertake outreach programs with the help of public libraries and a range of municipal entities. We are attempting to identify “qualified “pollinator gardens within the Township of Islip and add them to the L.I. Pollinator Pathway Map. We want to identify gaps and see a lot more butterflies & bees in 2023! If you are interested in volunteering in the Town of Islip Pollinator Pathways, please contact us at Islip.Pollinators@gmail.com . Thank You. Join The Pollinator Pathway Partners MUNICIPAL LEADERS: Islip Township https://islipny.gov/ Supervisor Angie Carpenter (631) 224-5500 supervisorsoffice@islipny.gov Office Address: Town Hall Second Floor 655 Main Street Islip, New York 11751 Department of Parks & Recreation: Commissioner Thomas Owens Office: Brookwood Hall 50 Irish Lane East Islip, NY 11730 Email: commissioner-rec@islipny.gov Website: https://islipny.gov/departments/parks-recreation-and-cultural-affairs Phone (631) 224-5411 Fax(631) 224-5440 Office Hours: M-F 8:30am to 4:30pm Department of Environmental Control Commissioner Martin J. Bellew Office: Town Hall West 401 Main Street, Room 302 Islip, NY 11751 Email: commissioner-dec@islipny.gov Website: https://islipny.gov/departments/environmental-control Phone (631) 595-3630 Fax (631) 224-5651 Office Hours: M-F 8:30am to 5:00pm Islip Town Parks Foundation Website: https://isliptownparksfoundation.org/ Incorporated Village of Brightwaters Website: https:// www.villageofbrightwaters.com/departments Village Administration: Village Hall 40 Seneca Drive Brightwaters, NY 11718 631 665-1280 Brightwaters Department of Public Works: DPW Yard 141 Orinoco Drive Brightwaters, NY 11718 631-983-2960 (please leave a message) Email: highway@villageofbrightwaters.com Incorporated Village of Islandia Website: https://www.newvillageofislandia.com/village-hall-elected-officials/ Village Office: 1100 Old Nichols Road Islandia, New York 11749 Phone: (631) 348-1133 Incorporated Village of Ocean Beach, Fire Island https://fireisland.com/ocean-beach-fire-island/ https://villageofoceanbeach.org/boards Village Office 315 Cottage Walk (Corner of Bay Walk & Cottage Walk Mail: P.O. Box 457, Ocean Beach, NY 11770 Email: info@villageofoceanbeach.org Phone: 631-583-5940 Fax: 631-583-7597 Incorporated Village of Saltaire, NY PO Box 5551, Bay Shore, NY 11706 Village Office (631)583-5566; Fax (631) 583-5986; Public Safety (631) 583-5572 https://www.saltaire.org/ https://fireisland.com/towns/saltaire-fire-island/ Public Officials: https://www.saltaire.org/officials.pdf Islip.Pollinators@gmail.com

  • Woodbridge

    Pollinator Pathway Woodbridge Welcome to the Woodbridge Pollinator Pathway! We are part of a larger grassroots movement to create a pollinator friendly corridor including municipal, private and commercial spaces. The Garden Club of Woodbridge, Woodbridge Land Trust and Amity 4-H Club have joined forces to establish pollinator-friendly habitats in our town. Our mission is to educate and spread the word to our community and private residents of the town who will commit to avoiding pesticides, controlling invasive plants and planting and conserving native plants that are favorable to pollinators. As more residential and commercial properties join this effort, quality habitat is created, allowing pollinators to proliferate. mailto:woodbridgelandtrust@gmail.com Follow us on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/woodbridgegardensforwildlife/ Garden Club of Woodbridge Woodbridge Land Trust Amity 4-H Club Massaro Community Farm Beecher Road School

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