Struebing and Maas enjoy creating
pollinator gardens
Still time to register for Master
Naturalist Core Education program
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[August 22, 2019]
LINCOLN
This is a great time of year to enjoy watching butterflies and other
pollinators visit garden plants. Gardeners looking to expand their
selection of pollinator plants should consider visiting local
prairies such as Kickapoo Creek Park, and Creekside Environmental
Center. Also, take a stroll through your neighborhood and check out
what other gardeners have done in their yards.
Everyone can create a pollinator habitat. A pollinator garden can be
as small as a container with zinnias and alyssum, to a flower
garden, to several acres of prairie. Pollinator gardens should be
located in a full sun location, sheltered from the wind and provide
nectar and pollen plants, and larval food sources. Once you have
create pollinator habitat consider registering the garden with one
of several pollinator projects.
Two Logan county gardeners have developed projects on their
properties that are not only attractive landscaping but also provide
habitat for wild birds and butterflies. In 2017, Mona Maas of
Elkhart, and Jim and Anne Struebing of New Holland, registered their
gardens to became Illinois Audubon Certified Society Bird and
Butterfly Sanctuaries. Maas and Struebing recommend starting small
and gradually transforming traditional gardens to native plantings.
They cite the many online resources, such as the Illinois Audubon
Society website,
https://illinoisaudubon.org/
programs/bird-butterfly-sanctuary-certification/ and the
University of Illinois Extension wildflowers website that can help
in getting started with native plantings,
https://web.extension.
illinois.edu/ wildflowers/intro.cfm .
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Jim Struebing of New Holland is
surrounded by coneflowers in his restored prairie plot. His garden, as well as
that of Mona Maas of Elkhart, have been certified as Bird and Butterfly
Sanctuaries by the Illinois Audubon Society and were featured in the Summer
issue of Illinois Audubon Magazine.
Both Maas and Jim Struebing are volunteers in the University of Illinois
Extension Master Naturalist Program, and both cite the importance of this
connection in learning how to design and implement their gardens.
For more information about the University of Illinois Extension Naturalist Core
Education course, go to
https://
web.extension.illinois.edu/ registration/?RegistrationID=20731.
Registration for the upcoming session can be completed online through August 25.
[Jennifer Fishburn
Horticulture Educator] |