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  • Pollinator Pathway Map

    This page displays the Pollinator Pathway map with the icons representing all the addresses on the map. Pollinator Pathway Map To explore an area, enter an address in the text box below. If you get an error message, refine your search by providing more detail for the address. The search may not take you to the exact address you type in, but it will take you to the general vicinity near your address. From there you can explore the map. All Gardens Public Gardens Error Text

  • Pollinator Pathway Map

    This page displays the Pollinator Pathway map with the icons representing all the addresses on the map. Pollinator Pathway Map To explore an area, enter an address in the text box below. If you get an error message, refine your search by providing more detail for the address. The search may not take you to the exact address you type in, but it will take you to the general vicinity near your address. From there you can explore the map. All Gardens Public Gardens Error Text

  • Millbrook Library

    Visit our public garden in Millbrook at . < Back Millbrook Library 3 Friendly Ln, Millbrook, NY 12545, USA The Millbrook Library Native Garden is a vibrant, pesticide-free planting space designed to support local pollinators while creating a place of beauty and learning for the community. Installed in 2025 on the lawn outside the Franklin Avenue entrance, the garden features native plants that provide essential food and habitat for pollinating insects and birds throughout the seasons. This project was made possible through the generous support of the Friends of the Millbrook Library, funded by proceeds from their annual Holiday Silent Auction and ongoing Book Sale, along with grant funding from the Millbrook Garden Club. The garden also reflects the Library’s commitment to environmental stewardship through its participation in the Sustainable Libraries Certification Program, which emphasizes sustainability, social equity, and economic responsibility. In addition, the Friends launched a plastic film recycling initiative in response to the Trex Plastic Recycling Challenge, collecting 1,000 pounds of plastic waste to earn a composite bench that will be installed in the garden in spring 2026. Proudly registered with the Pollinator Pathway, the garden contributes to a growing network of habitats that nurture pollinators and strengthen our local ecosystem. Witch alder, Black chokeberry, Red chokeberry, Spicebush, Little bluestem, Blazing star, American senna, Mountain mint, and more!

  • Illinois

    Towns along the Pollinator Pathway in Chicago Edwardsville Owaneco

  • Lake-Mchenry County

    Pollinator Pathway Lake/Mchenry County Join The Pollinator Pathway

  • Tetons

    Pollinator Pathway Tetons Welcome to the Pollinator Pathway of the Tetons "The Pollinator Pathway project is organized by volunteers from town conservation organizations 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". Mission statement for the Pollinator Pathway of the Tetons: The Pollinator Pathway of the Tetons aims to weave together a network of pollinator-friendly green spaces throughout the town and surrounding areas, acting as "stepping stones" between larger habitat patches. This benefits not only the pollinators but also the overall health and biodiversity of the ecosystem, including the larger animals like deer and elk that rely on healthy native plant populations. To create and connect pollinator-friendly habitats within the community, encouraging a corridor of native plants and pesticide-free spaces. This helps support bees, butterflies, hummingbirds, and other vital pollinators. To educate residents about the importance of pollinators and how to support them through native plant gardening and responsible land use practices. This includes promoting the use of native plants, avoiding pesticides, and protecting nesting areas. To inspire and empower community members to participate in pollinator habitat creation, fostering a network of committed individuals and organizations. Follow the Pollinator Pathway of the Tetons on Facebook Contact us: pollinatorpathwaytetons@gmail.com Partners/Resources Partners Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation https://jhwildlife.org Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance https://jhalliance.org Jackson Hole Land Trust https://jhlandtrust.org Teton Plants-Wyoming Native Plant Society https://tetonplants.org Teton Conservation District https://www.tetonconservation.org U.S. Forestry Service https://www.fs.usda.gov Resources University of WY Publication B-1305 Promoting Pollinators on Your Place https://www.uwyo.edu/barnbackyard/_files/documents/resources/pollinators/pollinatorguide.pdf Sources of Native Plants and Seeds Teton Conservation District www.tetonconservation.org/native-plants Join The Pollinator Pathway

  • Wyoming

    Towns along the Pollinator Pathway in Tetons

  • 26 Captain Bangs Rd

    Laura < Back 26 Captain Bangs Rd I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. We've created native grass based meadow, replacing a previous tennis court and native plants as a foundation planting around the house. Little blue stem, Cimicifuga, Monarda, Rudbeckia, Echinacea, Amsonia, Baptisia, Spigelia, Pycnanthemum, Solidago, Zizia, Asters, Halesia carolina tree

  • 30 Taconic Rd

    Michelle < Back 30 Taconic Rd I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Over the last few years, we've built new gardens around our wooded backyard, adding paths and seating areas surrounded by native understory trees, shrubs, sedges, ferns and perennials of all kinds with the aim of successional blooming throughout much of the year. There are still elements to be built - like a small pond - and always more plants to be installed, but the progress so far has been wonderfully encouraging! 2026 will be the garden's third year, and I've already been seeing more butterflies and bees, as well as salamanders, frogs and fireflies. It's really delightful seeing all the life in the yard. The goal is to minimize the lawn in the back, and completely remove it in the front, creating a healthy, functioning understory that both we and the critters that inhabit the property can enjoy and benefit from. I'd estimate that over 75% of the species planted are native to our county, with a few that are native to various areas of the East Coast. Existing canopy trees include sugar maple, red maple, black birch and various oaks. Newly added understory trees include hollies, redbuds, dogwoods, amelanchier, and arborvitae. The various shrubs & vines include spicebush, witch hazel, hazelnut, eastern wahoo, common ninebark, inkberry, blackhaw viburnum, shrubby St. John, sweetfern, clethra, fothergilla, oakleaf hydrangeas, wild hydrangeas, New Jersey tea, Carolina allspice, bottlebrush buckeye, blueberries, dwarf bush honeysuckle, and coral honeysuckle.

  • 123 School St

    David < Back 123 School St I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. I have eight flower beds, nearly all perennials, including cone flowers, brown-eyed susans, and swamp milkweed. Our yard won a 2025 Notable Landscape Award from Bloomfield. Purple cone flowers, brown-eyed susans, Red Bud, Witch Hazel; swamp milkweed in backyard.

  • Bath Meadow Conservancy Riverfront

    Visit our public garden in Bath at . < Back Bath Meadow Conservancy Riverfront 295 Front St, Bath, ME 04530, USA The Bath Meadow Conservancy will soon regenerate the only open riverfront on the Kennebec River in downtown bath as a nearby nature sanctuary, A former coal pocket and brownfield, it was saved from development by neighbors who have raised $680,000 to buy the $800,000 property. As soon as we raise the remaining $120,000 to pay off the mortgage on the land, meadow construction and planting will begin. Visit us at meadowconservancy.org t o see our activities, events, and school programs. Or Join Us: meadowconservancy@gmail.com Keystone plants along with some shrubs and trees.

  • Lewisboro Garden

    MaryAnn < Back Lewisboro Garden I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It's easy. Two acres of the property are fenced in and planted. Deer browsing the biggest challenge. JUNE 2024 – NATIVE PLANTS Anise – Hyssop – Agastache foeniculum Beardtongue – Penstemon digitalis Bee Balm – Monarda didyma Black-eyed Susan – Rudbeckia hirta Blue False Indigo – Baptisia australis Blue Star – Amsonia hubrichtii Carolina Lupine – Thermopsis villosa Common Milkweed – Asclepias syriaca Coral Bells – Heuchera (many varieties) Creeping Phlox – Phlox subulata Eastern Redbud – Cercis canadensis Evening Primrose – Oenothera biennis Field Pussytoes – Antennaria neglecta Fleabane – Erigeron (several varieties) Fringed Loosestrife – Lysimachia ciliata Goatsbeard – Aruncus dioicus High Bush Blueberry – Vaccinium corymbosum Indian Pipes – Monotropa uniflora Comfrey – Symphytum Canada Anemone – Anemone canadensis Christmas Fern – Polystichum acrostichoides Red Maple – Acer rubrum Eastern Red Cedar – Juniperus virginiana Virginia Creeper – Parthenocissus Sugar Maple – Acer saccharum White Yarrow – Achillea millefolium Maidenhair Fern – Adiantum pedatum White Snakeroot – Ageratina altissima Chives – Allium schoenoprasum Christmas Fern – Polystichum acrostichoides Columbine – Aquilegia canadensis Wild Geranium – Geranium maculatum Golden Rod – Many varieties Common Blue Violet – Viola papilionacea Hairy Ageratum – Conoclinium Queen of the Prairie – Filipendula rubra False Solomon Seal – Maianthemum racemosum Smooth Solomon Seal – Polygonatum biflorum Jack-in-the-Pulpit – Arisaema triphyllum Deerberry – Vaccinium stamineum Pipsissewa – Pyrola chlorantha Dogwood – Cornus florida Blazing Star – Liatris spicata American Witchhazel – Hamamelis virginiana L. Butterfly Weed – Asclepias tuberosa Canada Mayflower – Maianthemum canadense Native Iris – Iris virginica Jacob’s Ladder – Polemonium reptans Leucothoe – Leucothoe axillaris Lowbush Blueberry – Vaccinium pallidum Mapleleaf Viburnum – Viburnum acerifolium Mayapple – Podophyllum peltatum Mountain Mint – Pycnanthemum muticum New York Ironweed – Vernonia noveboracensis Ninebark – Physocarpus opulifolius Oakleaf Hydrangea – Hydrangea quercifolia Ohio Spiderwort – Tradescantia ohiensis Purple Coneflowers – Echinacea purpurea Sassafras tree – Sassafras albidum Smooth Blue Aster – Symphyotrichum laeve Spicebush – Lindera benzoin Spotted Wintergreen – Chimaphila maculata Straw Foxglove – Digitalis lutea Summer Phlox – Phlox paniculata Vintleaf – Jeffersonia diphylla White Goldenrod – Solidago bicolor White Sage – Artemisia ludoviciana White Woodland Aster – Aster (Eurybia) divaricatus Wild Ginger – Asarum canadense Wild Stonecrop – Sedum ternatum Winterberry – Ilex verticillata

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