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- 169 Beech Tree Ln
Nancy < Back 169 Beech Tree Ln I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.
- 401 Stare Road
Johanna < Back 401 Stare Road I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.
- 61247 Fairfield Drive
Al < Back 61247 Fairfield Drive I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.
- 21669 Paloma Drive
carol < Back 21669 Paloma Drive I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Yes
- Ulrich Lorimer
Advisory Board Member < Back Ulrich Lorimer Advisory Board Member Uli Lorimer serves as the Director of Horticulture for the Native Plant Trust, a leading non-profit dedicated to preserving the native flora of the Northeastern United States. In this role, he oversees the acclaimed Garden in the Woods in Framingham and Nasami Farm in Western Massachusetts, which focuses on native plant propagation and research. Uli’s impressive career includes positions at the National Arboretum, Wave Hill, and as the Curator of Native Plants at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. A lifelong enthusiast of plants and biodiversity, Uli continues to study the region’s ecosystems, collect seeds from the wild, and introduce new plants to gardens. He is also a prolific author and speaker, well-known to audiences across the horticultural community. His publications include Tough Natives for Tough Places and A Native Plant Reader. His latest work, The Northeast Native Plant Primer, reflects his deep commitment to native plants and their ecological value. Uli currently writes the Ask the Gardener column for the Boston Globe, sharing ecological horticulture guidance with the region. With a science-based approach and a passion for biodiversity, Uli offers invaluable insights into selecting plants that maximize the ecological impact of our gardens while celebrating the beauty of native flora. Previous Next
- 377 Fielding Street
Sven < Back 377 Fielding Street I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Echinacea Goldenrod Brown-eyed Susan Boneset Culver's root Cardinal flower Blue cardinal flower Blue mistflower White snakeroot Fringed loosestrife Cinquefoil Rattlesnake master Chokeberry Indian grass Tickseed Bracken fern Trillium Wood geranium Purple lovegrass Bergamot
- 132 Greer Dr W
Gary < Back 132 Greer Dr W I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Trillium, day Lilly, butterfly bush
- 14 Fairlawn St
Bonnie < Back 14 Fairlawn St I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Echinacea, milkweed, black-eyed Susan, Joe-pye weed, butterfly bush, dahlias, hydrangeas, yarrow, various herbs, zinnias, cleome, phlox, wigelia, lilies, hyssop, mums, lantana, various annuals. squash, blueberries, salad greens & more
- Brookfield | Pollinator Pathway
Welcome to the Brookfield Pollinator Pathway If you're interested in joining the pathway please sign up! Join the Pollinator Pathway Pollinators fertilize the plants in our yards and parks but also on our farms and orchards. The Pollinator Pathway project is an effort by volunteers from municipal and private conservation organizations, garden clubs, and interested citizens working together to establish pollinator-friendly habitat and food sources for bees, butterflies, hummingbirds and other pollinating insects and wildlife along a series of continuous corridors. Most native bees have a range of about a half-mile, so the goal is to connect properties that are no farther apart than that. This project began in 2017 in Wilton. Since then, pathways have been established in over 27 towns in CT and NY and the list keeps growing! Join the effort - protect our future!
- 426 Fallriver Dr
Marilyn < Back 426 Fallriver Dr I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. I live in a suburban neighborhood so I created landscaped Ohio native plants/pollinator plant beds around the perimeter of the back yard and incorporated native plants in a landscaped bed in the front yard. We are having a drought so the photos are not of the gardens at their best. Front: Serviceberry shrub, Serviceberry tree, 3-Blue False Indigo, 3-Yellow False Indigo, Yellow Wood Poppies, and Ohio native Hydrangea incorporated with hostas and ferns--work in progress, deer rutted the tree so a new one planted this fall (not in photo). Back: Native Ohio/ pollinator plants for spring, summer, and fall; Monarch Way Station with Swamp & other milkweeds plus Bronze Fennel for the Swallowtails. St. John's Wort shrubs, Spicebush, and Pipeline.
- 22 Tannery Ln N
Louise < Back 22 Tannery Ln N I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy.


