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  • 22C Chandler Road

    Nancy < Back 22C Chandler Road I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Bayberry, columbine, jack in the pulpit, black eyed susan, virginia creeper, bluebells, liatris spicata, oak trees, maple trees, white pines, black walnuts, paper birches, summersweet, bluets, sedges, water lily (american white). Plan to add virginia roses this spring (ordered).

  • 23 Grand St

    Anne Marie < Back 23 Grand St I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.

  • 101 Fern Lake Road

    Jean < Back 101 Fern Lake Road I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Asclepias syriaca, bee balm, yarrow, chives, dill, black chokeberry, Athyrium, Bleeding Heart, asters, coreopsis, sugar maples,

  • 30 Walnut Avenue

    Andrea < Back 30 Walnut Avenue I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. spice bush, winterberry holly, goldenrod, milkweed, trillium, celandine poppy, dandelions, buttercups, black walnut, white oak, maple, shagbark hickory, trumpet honeysuckle, elderberry, hairy mountain mint, sweet pepper bush, rosebay rhododendron, witch hazel, native bergamot, anise hyssop, etc

  • 30 Supina Road

    Elaine < Back 30 Supina Road I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Too many to name. See photo attached.

  • 6 Bridle Path Trl

    Anne < Back 6 Bridle Path Trl I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.

  • Fishkill | Pollinator Pathway

    Pollinator Pathways of Fishkill Inspired by the Pollinator Pathway Project, local resident, Monika Kaminski, created a pollinator garden with the support of the Town of Fishkill. The first garden was started in 2019 at Jean van Pelt Park. In 2020, we plan to expand to other parks in the Town of Fishkill and encourage local residents to participate! If you'd like to join us, please check us out at: facebook.com/naturegardensfishkillny You can also e-mail us at: NatureGardensofFishkill@gmail.com

  • 45 Hunts Pl

    Katharine < Back 45 Hunts Pl I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Goldenrods, Asters, Milkweeds, Red Columbine, Wild Bergamot, Woodland sunflower, Foamflower, Coral honeysuckle, Common hoptree, Western pearly everlasting, Spotted horsemint, Anise hyssop, purple lovegrass, little bluestem, shrubby cinquefoil, brown eyes susan, crabapple, eastern redbud, northern white cedar, dogwood

  • 405 N Chestnut St

    Kate < Back 405 N Chestnut St I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Milkweed (butterfly, Canada, common, whorled), Texas sage, brown-eyed susans, Gregg’s mist flower, cone flower (yellow and purple), wild lupine, prairie sunflower, rock rose, coral honeysuckle, red yucca

  • 5 Central St,

    Sonja < Back 5 Central St, I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Blueberry, Maple, Black Walnut, Dogwood, Swamp Milkweed, Bee Balm, May Apple

  • 18 Fawn Ridge Dr

    Jeanne < Back 18 Fawn Ridge Dr I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.

  • Wilton | Pollinator Pathway

    Wilton Pollinator Pathway Wilton residents have the opportunity to use their own backyards to make an impact on the environment by joining the Pollinator Pathway. The program aims to establish pollinator-friendly habitat and food sources for bees, butterflies, hummingbirds and the plethora of other pollinating insects and wildlife along two continuous corridors, Route 33 and Route 7 which abuts the Norwalk River. This branch heads east and connects to the Wilton/Weston Pollinator Pathway. While two roadways have been earmarked as the Pollinator Pathway, all residents are encouraged to participate. The initiative began in April 2017, and citizens are able to join the program by pledging to create a pollinator-friendly space with native nectar and larval host plants on their property--as small as a container to as large as a meadow--and to use pest management techniques that do not require pesticides to control insects or weeds. Yard Visits From A Master Gardener As part of the program, the Pollinator Pathway offers visits to people’s yards by master gardeners for free assessments about where to plant pollinator plants and which ones to choose. Pollinator Pathway Logo Wilton artist, Paige Lyons, designed the logo, which shows the town map in green and the configuration of the pathway beginning with the loop in the town center and moving in a “Y” up Ridgefield Rd and Danbury Rd along the Norwalk River. Pollinator Gardens Planted So Far... Allen's Meadow, Danbury Rd new meadow coming summer 2020 Chess Park, River Rd, Town Center Hillside Cemetery, Ridgefield Rd April 2017 April 2018 Norwalk River Valley Trail at Sharp Hill Rd & Autumn Ridge Wilton Library Children's Garden The Wilton Pollinator Pathway is a collaboration of Norwalk River Watershed Association, Wilton Garden Club, Wilton Land Conservation Trust, and Woodcock Nature Center with support from Highstead Foundation, Hudson-to-Housatonic Regional Conservation Parnership (H2H), and Norwalk River Valley Trail (NRVT) on behalf of the community of Wilton. Our steering committee is led by Jackie Algon, info@pollinator-pathway.org . Follow us on Facebook Add your property, a town garden, or a pesticide-free open space in your town to this map of private and public way-stations along the Pollinator Pathway. The black and white butterfly logos mark residences that provide a food and shelter for pollinators. The green and purple butterfly logos mark public gardens managed by volunteers The blue pins mark protected open space that provides pesticide-free native habitat for wildlife, including pollinators. Email us at info@norwalkriver.org and include the address of the property you would like to add.

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