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1541 items found for ""
- Old version of Rocky Point
Pollinator Pathway Rocky Point Buy a sign Rocky Point Historical Society and Museum 172 Hallock Landing Road, Rocky Point A Historical Colonial and medicinal garden. With the support of ReWild of Long Island the installation of a native plant rain garden is in process. For more information email: info@rockypointhistoricalsociety.org Join The Pollinator Pathway
- Philipstown
Pollinator Pathway Philipstown
- 601 clark NW
< Back 601 clark NW comstock park was white pine - white oak presettlement (1800) natural community. Besides forbs, shrubs, and trees are grasses and sedges. CPUP concentrates on biodiversity for beneficials not just pollinators by providing shelter, food, host plants through out the year. Has many species of native bees. And is a homegrown national park. Previous Next
- Old version of Millburn
Pollinator Pathway Millburn Township Buy a sign The Millburn Pollinator Pathway connects public and private gardens containing New Jersey native plant species for the benefit of the Millburn Township community, flora and fauna alike. Native pollinators and the native plants upon which they rely have evolved together, belong together, and together will help to restore balance to our ecosystem. Each garden comprising the Pathway provides our native pollinators, such as butterflies, moths, bees, and hummingbirds, with the plants that will attract them, provide them with food, shelter and places to reproduce. One of the two public gardens located in Taylor Park is designated as a Rain Garden. The other is a Monarch Milkweed Garden originally planted as an Eagle Scout Project. On Glen Avenue, across from the Locust Grove entrance to the South Mountain Reservation, can be found a mini-wildflower garden seasonally hosting a variety of pollinators. The traffic triangle at the intersection of Whittingham Terrace and Mountainview Road became a community volunteer project converting a barren space into a pollinator garden where signs informing the public about the necessity of providing native plants for pollinators can be found. Creating the continuity needed to comprise a Pollinator Pathway are the private yards throughout Millburn where residents continue to incorporate native pollinator-friendly plants into their yards and eliminate the use of chemical pesticides and herbicides. Through ongoing outreach and with community support, the Millburn Township Green Team continues the work to grow and strengthen the Millburn Pollinator Pathway in order to provide our pollinators with the habitats they require to survive and thrive, thus creating a healthier environment for us all. Join The Pollinator Pathway Learn more at https://twp.millburn.nj.us/220/Green-Team Partner Organizations Millburn Township Green Team, Millburn Environmental Commission, The Short-Hills Garden Club & Millburn-Short Hills Chamber of Commerce MillburnTownshipGreenTeam@gmail.com
- 115 Hobart St
< Back 115 Hobart St 1) .Symphyotrichum cordifolius - Blue Wood Aster (2) -1 Butterfly Milkweed (AT) (4) Swamp Milkweed (AI) (5) .Sambucus nigra ‘Laciniata’ - Laceleaf Elderberry (1) Mountain Mint x2 Liatris Previous Next
- 7108 Spear Street
< Back 7108 Spear Street Joe-pye, aster, goldenrod, pearly everlasting, swamp milkweed, marsh marigold, fireweed, tickseed, horsetail, yellow trout lilies, sunflower, jerusalem artichoke, hepaticas, St john's wort, jewelweeds, blue flag iris, lobelias, bee balm, hyssop, meadow phlox, solomon's seal, coneflowers, brown eyed susans, bloodroot, cup plant, lupine, red trillium, vervain, broad leaf cattail. Previous Next
- 461 Humphrey Street
< Back 461 Humphrey Street Previous Next
- Old version of Southington
Pollinator Pathway Southington Buy a sign
- June 2022 Newsletter | Pollinator Pathway
< PPS Homepage June 2022 Newsletter Fern Galperin Prepared soil awaits hundreds of native plants at Kosciuszko Park, ban on certain harmful pesticides used on golf courses passes in Hartford, students in Stamford taking up shovels to protect pollinators, Pollinator Week June 20-26 Events (garden tours in the region, Designs by Lee celebration), and more. Read the newsletter. Previous Next
- Lower Makefield
< Back Lower Makefield, Pennsylvania Ordinance / Proclamation Native Plants More Information
- 196 Schenck Boulevard
< Back 196 Schenck Boulevard Monarda Little Blue Stem Switch Grass Staghorm Sumac Sheep Laurel Wild Strawberry Northern red Raspberry Smooth blackberry Pussytoes Lupin Wood lily Yellow wild indigo Wild garlic Sun drops creeping phlox Blue Eyed Grass Sedge Siideoats grass Horsetail milkweed Gayfeather Thoroughwort Mountain Mint Evening Primrose New England Blazing Star Black eyed susan Chokeberry Serviceberry Trumpet Honeysuckle Showy Goldenrod Butterfly Weed Side oats grass Summer sweet Previous Next
- PPS at Bartlett Arboretum Honey Harvest Festival | Pollinator Pathway
< PPS Homepage PPS at Bartlett Arboretum Honey Harvest Festival Stamford Advocate Pollinator Pathway Stamford attracted a lot of buzz at the Honey Harvest Festival. Stamford Advocate. Photos by Tyler Sizemore. Honey Harvest Festival at Bartlett Arboretum . Previous Next





