Exploring the Importance of Pollinator Pathways

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Date: Thu February 18, 2021
Time: 7:00 pm
Place: Zoom Presentation
Contact Email: programreg@lymepl.org
!!! seems it only displays well the 2nd time? ugh.
Learn about Pollinator Pathways with local eco-friendly gardening experts Jim Sirch & Mary Ellen Lemay, and how to create your own. Pollinator pathways are pesticide-free corridors of native plants that provide nutrition and habitat for bees, butterflies, and other pollinators. These pathways are crucial to biodiversity, the production of healthy crops, and the health of ecosystems that wild animals rely on for food and habitat. Most native plants require less watering and upkeep than ornamentals and the pollinators you attract will help your other garden plants and vegetables flourish as well.

It is free and open to all, made possible with funding from the Friends of the Lyme Public Library.

Registration required: programreg@lymepl.org
When you register, you will receive a zoom link several days before the presentation. For more information call the library at 860-434-2272.

Lyme Pollinator Pathways. A new chapter of this national effort has been established in Lyme. Lyme organizations and individuals working together to establish patches of pollinator plants and pathways between them. Do you already have a patch (big or small) to add to the pathway? Let us know. Or do you want to create one? Follow the Facebook page to connect and learn more! https://www.facebook.com/groups/lymepollinators or email LymePollinator@gmail.com


Learn about Pollinator Pathways with local eco-friendly gardening experts Jim Sirch & Mary Ellen Lemay, and how to create your own. Pollinator pathways are pesticide-free corridors of native plants that provide nutrition and habitat for bees, butterflies, and other pollinators. These pathways are crucial to biodiversity, the production of healthy crops, and the health of ecosystems that wild animals rely on for food and habitat. Most native plants require less watering and upkeep than ornamentals and the pollinators you attract will help your other garden plants and vegetables flourish as well.

It is free and open to all, made possible with funding from the Friends of the Lyme Public Library.

Registration required: programreg@lymepl.org
When you register, you will receive a zoom link several days before the presentation. For more information call the library at 860-434-2272.

Lyme Pollinator Pathways. A new chapter of this national effort has been established in Lyme. Lyme organizations and individuals working together to establish patches of pollinator plants and pathways between them. Do you already have a patch (big or small) to add to the pathway? Let us know. Or do you want to create one? Follow the Facebook page to connect and learn more! https://www.facebook.com/groups/lymepollinators or email LymePollinator@gmail.com