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“My role as the education and volunteer coordinator, I create and put out education events, and I also bring in speakers that are professionals on that topic, to help educate not only landowners, which is our main focus, but also the general public. So, families, kids, middle school age, high school age.”
“She helped found it in 2017 and it’s now a network of over 350 communities across 19 states and Canada,” Morrow said. “She serves as a facilitator of the pollinator pathway advocacy and pesticide committee, which has helped work to pass the Bees and Birds Protection Act in New York in 2023.”
“Pollinators in general are really anything that helps pollinate flowers and plants. It’s a big component to agriculture—helping not only wildflowers thrive and keep alive but in agriculture we need those plants to be pollinated as well,” she said. “Pollinators can range from bees to butterflies, but it ranges out to other things that people don’t think about like birds, beetles, and grasshoppers.”
“If they start to diminish or we lose a lot of them, we’re going to see less success in our flowers and in our agricultural crops. Agricultural crops going down means less yield of food for not only us, but animals that we feed… then the whole meat industry could go down. It’s a whole tumbling block effect.”
“It has multiple different types of habitats. There’s two ponds on the property, there’s some wood lot, but then there’s a whole bunch of meadow, rolling hills and meadow,” Morrow said. “In that meadow is a bunch of milkweed… a great space to see pollinators and to find specifically monarchs.”
“If you do plan on coming, make sure that you’re ready for walking on a little bit of hills, because our reserve definitely isn’t flat. So make sure you have some water with you and some sneakers on your feet, and you should be good to go.”
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