Saturday, January 1, 2022

Creating Pollinator Gardens - Let's Go Native!

Shall we demonstrate a sense of purpose by working to save the earth one backyard at a time?

"We are deluged by information regarding our destruction of the world and hear almost nothing about how to nurture it. But it is not enough to weep for our lost landscapes; we have to put our hands in the earth to make ourselves whole again." Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmmerer

One of the biggest contributors [threats to pollinators] is the disappearance and fragmentation of native plant habitats. The good news is that even small actions by individuals can help. A key to making native pollinators more abundant is increasing native plant abundance."

Will you join us by creating a diverse native plant habitat for our local pollinators, insects, birds, amphibians, and mammal friends; As well as growing fruit, vegetables, and flowers for ourselves?


INDEX of what is in this posting.
  1. Pollinators-characteristics, the importance of, and examples of.
  2. Why it is important to grow native plants.
  3. What you can do to help.
  4. List of locations to purchase native plants and seeds. 
  5. Introduction text to the Vermont Native Plants and the pollinators and other insects they attract file. (Hotlink, click on the "Introduction..." to access the text). Accompaniment to the spreadsheet.
  6. A spreadsheet listing nearly all (1,458) Vermont Native Plants and some of the pollinators and other insects they each attract.  (Hotlink, click on "A spreadsheet listing..." to access the spreadsheet). 
  7. How to Grow Native Wildflowers & Grasses from SEED. 7b. Native seed collecting (a coordinated effort). 
  8. What is a hybrid? What is a cultivar? What is variety?
  9. Invasive Plants - Be Aware.
  10. Butterfly, native Bee & Dragonfly attracting tips.
  11. How to plant native pollinator plants.
  12. Our Yard Goals
  13. Bernie's Native Gardening tips
  14. Importance of healthy soil and so-called weeds.
  15. Resource Links to help you with native plant ID, care...
  16. New England Native plants with wildlife value and desirable landscaping attributes
  17. Plant list-  planting recommendations for Vermont
  18. References
  19. Food for Thought Quotes
  20. Climate Change - Global Warming


Let's Go Native! Plant native plants that benefit pollinators. Why? Because

According to the Vermont Community Garden Network, "More than three-quarters of the world's food crops benefit from animal pollination - the bees and other creatures whose help we need to produce many of the foods we eat. Unfortunately, both honeybees and many species of native bees are in trouble. (VT has two hundred and seventy species of native bees.)  Populations of both are in sharp decline due to pesticide use, disease and parasite problems, and loss of food and nesting habitat. "A team of researchers from the Vermont Center for Ecostudies has found that several species of bumblebees native to the state are in severe decline or appear to have vanished according to a recently published study by VTEcostudies and the Gund Institute. An NYT article "The Insect Apocalypse is Here" states, "What we're losing is not just the diversity part of biodiversity, but the bio part: life in sheer quantity." Bryan Pheifer in the "Extinction of Meaning" writes "What worries me, is that in the end, I suspect few among us will mourn the passing of a butterfly." 

Many kinds of butterflies and other wild pollinators are also in jeopardy. Insects are the foundation of the food chain.

UVM professor and author Bernd Heinrich writes in his book - A Naturalist At Large, "I was weaned on the concept of an ecological balance in nature, built on an intricate web of relationships among plants, herbivores, predators, and other life forms, where the fate of one can have a domino effect on the others."

This is why it’s so important to learn about and do all we can to protect all kinds of pollinators. And important to understand that pollinators need Native plants.
.

---------------------------------------------------------

1. First a Little About Pollinators

Photos (slides) credit: Annie White lecture / Wild Flower Society.

2. Why Native Plants? 
Douglas Tallamy author of Bringing Nature Home advises, The native pollinators of your area have a long evolutionary history tied closely with the native plants of your region and, understandably, have a preference for what they are used to, in some cases, they simply won't visit or can't digest most newcomer [Non-Native] or exotic plants. 


Slide credit: Annie White lecture / Wild Flower Society.

Native is defined as a plant that is interacting with the community (plants, animals, and pathogens) that historically helped shape it.

Or this definition -

native: a plant or animal that has evolved in a given place over a period of time sufficient to develop complex and essential relationships with the physical environment and other organisms in a given ecological community. 
From The Living Landscape (2014), by Rick Darke & Doug Tallamy.


Why? Because Audubon Society reports: New research finds that Carolina Chickadees require a landscape with seventy percent native plants to keep their population steady. Is your yard more of a 'food desert' or an eatable buffet?


A single pair of breeding chickadees must find 6,000 to 9,000 caterpillars to rear one clutch of young, according to Doug Tallamy, a professor of entomology and wildlife ecology at the University of Delaware.
                                              Want songbirds? Plant natives.

 "The team's research, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, found only one distinction that determines if a spot is a boom or a bust for a bird population: whether it has plants native to the area." Nesting birds need insects to feed their chicks. 


These bugs (insects) need native plants. If you want to help the birds, plant native plants.
  



Slide credit: Annie White lecture / Wild Flower Society.

Why here in your hometown, in your yard? Because you want to protect Jericho and Vermont - the place where you live.  In our own backyards, native pollinator populations are dropping. More than one-quarter of the bumblebee species in the Northeast are threatened or have disappeared. Because you want to maintain the biodiversity of our homeland - our local butterflies, bees, birds, and other local creatures as well as native flowers - that identify our home as a unique place in the world- as our home.

By choosing native plants - which do not require any artificial fertilizers, synthetic chemical pesticides, or herbicides - for your landscape, you create a healthier place for yourself, your family, and your community. 

Watch this four-minute video by famed scientist E.O Wilson as he explains biodiversity, its importance, what we are losing and how fast, and what we need to do.  

Is your weed killer a risk to you and your family? Read about Glyphosate (the primary ingredient in Roundup) here

We can help maintain a sense of place (belonging and familiarity) by growing plants that are native to our area. 

Volunteers help install a Native Perennial Plant Garden in Jericho Ctr. near the Jericho Country Store in August 2018.

Here click here for information about planning on the "hell strip" the soil space between the road and the sidewalk. 


Hometown Habitat – LOCAL PLANTING TIPS


In May 2019 Sabina Ernst and the Jericho Energy Task Force Presented: Hometown Habitat (movie), stories of bringing nature home.

Once established, native plants don’t require the use of any chemicals or even extra watering and local birds and pollinators would rather visit them than visit artificial feeders. (In many cases they can eat only specific native plants).
Hometown Habitat is sponsored by the Jericho Conservation Commission and the Jericho Energy Task Force. The movie profiles seven “habitat heroes” who have used native plants to fill their yards and interviews entomologist Douglas Tallamy (author of “Bringing Nature Home”) who speaks about how non-native plants can lead to habitat and species loss. The movie and the following discussion inspired the audience to become habitat heroes by providing habitat for our own native wildlife. Here are some of the highlights:
  • Native plants support the Food Web of Life, including our own.
  • Native plants interact with the community (plants, animals, pathogens) that historically helped shape it. Native plants adapted (defensive measures) to native insects over the millennia.
  • Native plants (once established) when planted in the right location, require less care than non-native plants.
  • Our pollinators, butterflies, bees, birds, insects, and the rest of our native wildlife on the food web require native plants.
  • Non-native plants (aliens) oftentimes disrupt and displace native plants. Some become invasive. (Like Buckthorn, burning bush, Japanese Barberry, alien honeysuckle (there is native honeysuckle) ...). Some of the worst plant offenders actually produce chemicals within their tissues to prevent other plants from growing near them.  In most cases, these invasive plants are nursery plants that have escaped cultivation in people's gardens and gotten into the wild, displacing the native plants. 
  • You can be a Habitat Hero by planting native plants in your landscape. Consider limiting lawn areas to where you walk and designated areas that need low walkable sod. Fill the rest of your landscape with native plants for improved property value, pollinator attraction, and for your own enjoyment. Annie White said it so well: "Think of lawn as an area rug - not wall-to-wall carpet." Another reason to let go of some lawns is: reduced time doing yard work and fewer resources (fuel, water) spent.
  • Recognizing the importance of vulnerable pollinator species and their habitats, as well as initiating preservation efforts is key to maintaining our biological balance. (From Pollinator Partnership)

 Web search can locate sites that list native plants for your location by zip code or town. Bring both common and Latin names when you go shopping to ensure the plants you get are indeed native to your planting area. 
 Nativeplantfinder from National Wildlife Federation and Plantsforbirds from Audubon are good tools to identify what plants are native in your area.
A good reference book is "Native Plants for New England Gardens" by Mark Richardson and Dan Jaffe. Also, check out Doug Tallamy’s “Bringing Nature Home”.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Photo/slide credit: Annie White lecture / Wild Flower Society.

John and Nancy Haden at The Farm Between tell us "A diversity of native plants is also important to support insects, birds, and other wildlife. While some people might cringe at seeing caterpillars on their plants, we like it because we know that where there are caterpillars there are (or soon will be) butterflies."  

With alien grass lawns, and nonnative shrubs, flowers, and trees, we have created biological deserts around our homes.
  
"Great," some say. "No bugs.""

"But no bugs mean no birds, as almost all bird species (even those seed-eaters) feed insects and other arthropods to their young. If  you have mostly lawn, when you plant a few fruit trees and berry bushes, you don't have the beneficial predators and parasites to keep your fruit pests in check."  

Douglas Tallamy writes in Bringing Nature Home, Of the four million or so insect species on earth, a mere 1 percent interact with humans in negative ways. The other ninety-nine percent of the insect species pollinate plants, return the nutrients tied up in dead plants and animals to the soil, keep populations of insect herbivores in check, aerate and enrich the soil, and provide food either directly or indirectly for most other animals. 

The connection between nature/biodiversity and our quality of life.
Thomas Lovejoy, tells us "Ecosystems will go through small collapses, but they usually don't go through big collapses - they just erode and become less capable of doing what they were doing before. So what we're going through as a planet is the erosion of the biology of the planet, and its ability to support people - and it makes no sense at all."


1.    "Carbon emissions have rendered meaningless the ideal of a wilderness untouched by man; the new ideal is “wildness,” which is measured not by isolation from disturbance but by the diversity of organisms that can complete their life cycles." The End of the End of the Earth Essays by Jonathan Franzen. 

Read more on biodiversity @ What is Biodiversity and what does it matter to us? Also this article from BirdLife about Biodiversity.

Read what regenerative farming is @ https://beesnblooms.com/?page_id=21


                "What would the world be, once bereft

                 Of wet and of wildness? Let them be left,

                 O let them be left, wildness and wet;

                 Long live the weeds and the wilderness yet. 

                                    ~Gerard Manley Hopkins, 'Inversnaid'





==============================================

3. WHAT CAN YOU DO TO HELP?

Consider growing and maintaining less lawn and growing more Native pollinator plants

  
(which generally require no or low maintenance).  

Why: Most lawn grass has short roots; soil carbon is best built where there is root depth variation. Also, we burn a lot of fossil fuels caring for lawns. For every 11 gallons of gas used in lawn mowing, we add about a hundred and ninety-four pounds of CO2 to the atmosphere. Reducing lawn size by growing a variety of native pollinator plants can help your land become a more productive carbon sponge. (Taking carbon out of the atmosphere and storing it).

We have been conditioned to think manicured lawns are desirable just as we were conditioned to utilize single-use plastics. Lawns were introduced, promoted, and sold into our culture - we can go back to a more natural landscape! 

We are each a part of the environment. What each of us individually does to pollute the environment adds up. And what each of us does to help rectify the damage to our environment adds up. 

To help in the area of habitat loss, consider purchasing a Vermont Habitat Stamp. The money is used to keep Vermont rivers clean, the woods connected, and our meadowlands open. 

Plant a garden using native flowering plants: 

  • Choose a variety of colors and shapes that will attract a variety of pollinators.
  • Choose plants that flower at different times providing nectar and pollen sources throughout the growing season. 
  • Plant in clumps rather than single plants to better attract pollinators.

Entomologist Douglas Tallamy, writes, If we use plants that evolved with our local animal communities as the foundation of our landscapes, we may be able to save much of our biodiversity from extinction.  

Wild Strawberry - a good alternative to a grass lawn. Or consider using clover dispersed in your lawn. Clover is a nitrogen fixer - a natural way to fertilize your lawn and is pollinator-friendly. 

More info on clover https://www.americanmeadows.com/grass-and-groundcover-seeds/clover-seeds/plant-clover-to-improve-soil-health

Photo credit: Annie White lecture / Wild Flower Society.

Wild for Pollinators encourages homeowners, schools, and businesses, to preserve permanent wild spaces for pollinator-friendly habitats or to create landscapes and/or container gardens with plants and gardening practices that benefit pollinators.  See the Northeast Pollinator Plants / River Berry Farm website, or USDA Forest Service website for instructions on how to plant a pollinator garden, or Kids Gardening website: Planning a Pollinator Garden for Kids.

==============================================

4. New England Native Plants are available for purchase at:  (Also see Seed offerings from some of those listed here).

  1. *WNRCD Winooski Natural Resources Conservation District Bare-root trees and shrubs can be ordered from Jan through March with one-day pick up on a single day in April. 
  2.  Intervale Conservation Nursery Offering bare-root trees and shrubs, potted plants (trees and shrubs), and perennial plugs. Seeds for most of these plants are harvested and grown locally.  
  3. *River Berry Farm (NEPP) at one-ninety-one Goose Pond Road, Fairfax, VT, and online Northeast Pollinator Plants. Native plants from our region.  The plants are very well labeled, stating if they are native to Vt or New England, or elsewhere. Large selection of pollinator native plants. River Berry Farm's website has a great matrix of native pollinator plants. Jane Sorenson proprietor.
  4. Turtle Hill Native Plants Twelve-eighty-three North St. Montpelier, VT (All plants six to fifteen dollars last I checked)
  5. Native Plant Trust, formerly New England Wild Flower Society
  6. Full Circle Gardens, Colchester, Vermont
  7. Arbor Day Foundation or Ten free trees with membership
  8. Elmore Roots 
  9. The Farm Between (Sterling College venture)
  10. Walden Heights Nursery & Orchard

Wildflower seeds and seed mixes.
  1. Xerces offers recommendations on where to buy native seeds.
  2. Prairie Moon Nursery (for native wildflower seed) Information about planting and maintenance of wildflower plants https://www.prairiemoon.com/blog/site-preparation? Note that you can select to see plants by the state they are native to. 
  3. Wild Seed Project (of Maine)
  4. Ernst Seeds Northeast native and naturalized species of plants.
  5. Vermont Wetland Plant Supply
  6. Vermont Wildflower Farm 
More places to buy native plants.
  1. Where to buy native plants in New England. Listing by Wild Seed Project.
  2. Vermont Wetland Plant Supply (Wholesale, though might sell volume retail). Orwell VT.
  3. List of Plants that feed Specialist Bees: Read why here. View the list of plants here or at https://jarrodfowler.com/host_plants.html

7. How to Grow native wildflowers and grasses from seed.

Planting area preparation: 

Kill off grass and other plants using newspaper or cardboard covered with mulch or limbs to keep the material from blowing away. Caution: do not use clear or black or other plastic. Plastic covering will harm and destroy the natural biologic life in the soil the microorganisms. Microbes have a lot to do with creating good soil structure, which promotes infiltration and drainage of water, soil aeration, and vigorous root growth and exploration.  ~Soil Microbiology: A Primer (UVM extension service).

Soil microbes play an essential role in decomposing organic matter, cycling nutrients, and fertilizing the soil. ~The Living Soil: The Role of Microorganisms in Soil Health

Read more about soil microorganisms at



Wildflower Seed Sowing:

 Heather McCargo Executive Director, of Wild Seed Project, does not recommend broadcasting their seed, they do not have the bulk quantity of native seed needed for broadcasting (which wastes much of the seed). If you choose that route, she suggests you go to the Prairie Moon website, an old established wild-type native nursery in the midwest. But we hand collect and process all of our seed, and it is too precious to waste with broadcasting. 

If you do purchase Wild Seed Project seeds, Heather recommends planting them in pots is much more successful than just broadcasting seeds. You will have good germination and all of the seeds will be much more likely to survive.

Regarding shade and deep shade areas: 
Recommended reading: Wild Seed blog called In the Shade - a shady landscape can be beautiful and much less work than a sunny site:




Read more about creating wildflower areas at:


Addresses designing, implementing and managing wildflower meadows. Including, site analysis, seed mix composition, distributing the seed, and post-planting management. 


==================================================
7b. Seed collecting
Northeast Wild Seed Collectors - coordinated effort to collect local seeds. 

==================================================

8. What is a hybrid? What is a cultivar? 
    What is variety?


Photo/slide credit: Annie White lecture / Wild Flower Society.

Cultivars are generally in single quotations after the species name such as Echinacea purpurea 'Magnus'. Magnus is a cultivar of the native purple coneflower. Cultivars may satisfy the pollinators, but it is safer to go with true native plants.

In a University of Vermont study, graduate student Annie White collected data on the attractiveness of native species to pollinators, compared to cultivar selections of these species (“nativars”).  Of the 13 pairs of plants she compared, seven of the native cultivars attracted significantly fewer bee pollinators than the non-cultivar species. These were  ‘Strawberry Seduction’ yarrow, ‘Corbett’ columbine, ‘Twilite Prairie Blues’ baptisia, three coneflower cultivars (‘Sunrise Big Sky’, ‘Pink Double Delight’, and ‘White Swan’), ‘Moerheim Beauty’ Helen’s flower, ‘Alma Poetschke’ New England aster, and ‘Red Grape’ spiderwort.

If all these lists and research results seem a bit overwhelming, you might start with Annie’s ten top plants.  These are herbaceous perennials that are native to the Northeast, attract a diversity of pollinator species, and perform well and look good in home landscapes.  They are the blue giant hyssop, purple coneflower, trumpet honeysuckle, sundial lupine, Helen’s flower, Culver’s root, foxglove beardtongue, Joe-Pye, New England aster, and wild bergamot.

  • Plants are identified by the common name followed by the italicized scientific name in parentheses. Example: River Birch, (Betula nigra).*
  • Plants' scientific names: Genus or generic name, followed by the specific epithet or species name. Read more on plants' scientific names here.
  • Cultivars (cultivated variety) are a variety that is created by breeding or cloning. They are given special names by their breeders or cloners. Example: River Birch (Betula nigra 'Heritage').*
  • When a mutation is caused by nature vs man, the variety is noted by "var." followed by the variety name. Example: (Sansevieria trifasciata var. Laurentii). 
  • Hybrids are a cross between two species. They are indicated by an "x" in the scientific name. Example: A hybrid of two shrubs, fragrant sage (Salvia clevelandii) and purple sage (Salvia leucophylla). The hybrid name is gray musk sage (Salvia x clevandii 'Pozo Blue').
  • Selective breeding for ornamental benefits often affects the qualities that made the plant beneficial for wildlife.*
  • Cloning can result in the loss of the genetic diversity that occurs in the natural world.* 
Sticking to the original native plant species when you can is the best plan if you're working to restore a functioning bit of the ecosystem.*
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

9. Invasive Plants

BEWARE of plants that the State of Vermont has identified as invasives. See the State of Vermont Invasive website. We are working to control the following invasives in our yard: Honeysuckle, Goutweed (Bishops weed), (Butterbur Sweet-coltsfoot-on VT watchlist but not yet listed as an invasive),  Canary Grass (Reed Canary Grass), and Knapweed. 


A weed is a plant that is where we do not want it. An alien is a plant from some other place. An invasive species is an alien that spreads as a nuisance or worse. 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

10. Attracting Butterflies and Native Bees

Add table salt (preferably sea salt) or wood ashes to a shallow tray containing small pebbles, water, and sand (with about one tablespoon of compost mixed into the sand). Cut pieces of fruit and lay them nearby to rot - attracts butterflies. *From National Wildlife Federations "Attracting Birds, Butterflies, and Other Backyard Wildlife". (Available from Jericho Center Library).


Gardening for Butterflies and moths:
Two types of plants needed - species that provide nectar for adults, and species that are host plants for butterfly larvae - in order to get new butterflies. (Note for example that the butterfly bush (Buddleja) feeds butterflies however no North American species of butterfly can use it as a larval host plant.) A partial list of plants that do both (nectar and larval host) are:
 Milkweeds (Asclepias), 
Butterfly weed (A.tuberosa), 
Common Milkweed (A.syriaca)
 and Swamp Milkweed (A.incarnata), 
Coneflowers and Black-eyed Susans (Rudbeckia)
 Buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis),
 Joe-Pye weed (Eupatorium dubium) 
or Hollow Stem Joe-Pye weed (E.fistulosum),
 Tulip trees, Sweetbay Magnolia, Black Cherry trees, 
Violets, 
Spicebush, 
Flowering Dogwood, (or any native Viburnum species).
  ~From Bringing Nature Home by Douglas Tallamy

Gardening for Bees (Vt has 270 species of native bees)
All Regions: Clover, Lamb's ear (Stachys), 
Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia), Coneflower (Echinacea), Sunflowers (Helianthus), 
Hyssop (Agastache), 
Sage (Salvia), Hibiscus, 
Cosmos, 
Catnip(Nepeta), 
North East: Willow (salix), 
Serviceberry (Amelanchier), 
Waterleaf (Hydrophyllum), 
Blueberry, 
Cranberry (Vaccinium),
 Bee balm, Firecrackers (Monarda), 
Lupine (Lupinus), 
Boneset (Eupatorium), 
Milkweed (Asclepias),
 Beardtongue (Penstemon),
 Blazing Star, 
Gayfeather (Liatris), 
Goldenrod (Solidago),
 Fleabane (Erigeron), 
Sunflower (Helianthus), 
Aster (Symphyotrichum and Aster).
 From The Bees in Your Backyard by Joseph Wilson & Olivia M. Carril.

BUMBLEBEE FORAGE GUIDE 
(Eastern Temperate Forests)
From Bumble Bees of North America, by Paul Williams, Robbin Thorp, Leif Richardson, & Sheila Colla
* Indicates predominately non-native)

Serviceberry (Amelanchier spp.)
Chokecherry (Prunus virginiana)
Lowbush Blueberry (Vaccinium angustifolium)
Harebell (Campanula rotundifolia)
Turtlehead (Chelone glabra)
Joe-Pye Weed (Eupatorium maculatum)
Wild Bergamot (Monarda fistulosa)
Obedient Plant (Physostegia virginiana)
Clovers (Trifolium spp.*)
Blazing Stars (Liatris spp.)
Prairie Clovers (Dalea spp.)
Goldenrods (Solidago spp.)
Rosinweeds (Siphium spp.)
Milkweeds (Asclepias spp.)
Plume Thistles (Cirsium spp.*)
Cassias (Cassia spp.)
Salix (willow) (Salix spp.)
Impatiens (jewelweed) (Impatiens spp.)
Crocus (Crocus spp.)
Dicentra (Dicentra spp.)
Kalmia (Kalmia spp.)

Solanum (Solanum spp.)


Gardening for Dragonflies: 
Black-eyed Susans (Rudbeckia hirta), 
Swamp Milkweed (Asclepias incarnata),
 Joe-Pye Weed (Eupatorium purpureum),
 Common Yarrow (Achillea millefolium).

Pollinator Values (Sampling from Ernst Seeds catalog)

Very high: Asters, Bonesets, Goldenrods, Milkweeds
High: Beardtongue, Bergamont (Beebalm), blackberry, Cardinal flower, Wild black cherry tree, Chokecherry (Special value to native bees), Purple coneflower, Gray dogwood, Ironweed, Joe-Pye weed, Spiderwort.
Medium: American Highbush Cranberry, Black-eyed Susan, Coreopsis (Tickseed), Pagoda dogwood, red osier dogwood, silky dogwood, Elderberry, Meadowsweet, Nanny-berry, Northern Arrowwood, Sumac, Turtlehead. 

Read about the world's sixth mass extinction: Plummeting insect numbers 'threaten collapse of nature'.
Insects are dying en masse
------------------------------------------------------------

11. HOW TO PLANT NATIVE POLLINATOR PLANTS Northeast Pollinator Plants / River Berry Farm. (CLICK ON LINK FOR DETAILS)

Photo/Slide credit: Annie White lecture / Wild Flower Society.

Slide credit: Annie White lecture / Wild Flower Society.


==============================================

12. OUR YARD GOALS:

  • Bird Sanctuary
  • Pollinator-friendly
  • Improve the soil
  • Increase the ratio of native to non-native plants
  • Grow fruit for ourselves, the birds/wildlife 
  • Combat invasives
  • Minimize lawn care and weeding


We aim to improve the soil, create a diverse native plant habitat for our local pollinators, insects, birds, amphibians, and mammal friends. As well as to grow fruit, vegetables, and flowers for ourselves. 

"The ultimate goal of creating a naturalistic, wildlife-friendly landscape is to restore a small piece of the natural ecosystem."
~From National Wildlife Federations "Attracting Birds, Butterflies, and Other Backyard Wildlife".

VIEW AN NOV 2020 UPDATE OF OUR YARD GOALS - Building a Sanctuary for insects, birds, and other wildlife here

This is fascinating! Plants can "hear" their pollinators and respond by increasing nectar production! 

=========================================================================

13. Bernie's 'Native' gardening tips

"Focusing on the ground beneath our feet is a place-based strategy that every community can engage in without the need for complex technologies that come with hidden costs."
 Fibershed by Rebecca Burgess with Courtney White
 Chelsea Green Publishing. 

  • Grow dense patches of native plants to reduce the need for weeding.
  • Consider cutting any weeds (before seeds set in) instead of pulling. Pulling disturbs the soil and provides an opportunity for weed seeds to grow.)
  • Native plant labels: Know what plant labels mean by 'Native'.   
    Native to U.S. - ok (better than alien/non-native.)
    Native to N.E. U.S. - better  (for Vermont plantings).
    Native to Vermont - Best (for Vermont plantings)

To find out the native range of a plant, Google the plant name followed by 'native range'. (Ex. Purple Coneflower native range). I often use this site to find native range https://gobotany.nativeplanttrust.org/species/ammophila/breviligulata/

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
14. Importance of Healthy Soil 
More on what you can do to help pollinators, and your home, our Earth.

SOIL is of equal importance to planting Native Pollinator Plants;  Soil is not a dirty word but we treat ‘soil’ like dirty ‘dirt’. “Understanding soils as natural infrastructure-as the foundation for other services-might also change hearts and minds.” Read more of Soils and climate: from hidden depths to center stage @ http://bit.ly/2RWtnHz

Restoring degraded soils and ecosystems  - We can do this in our own yards!

Trend lightly on so-called 'weeds'. At a minimum avoid pesticides, herbicides, fungicides. Commercial interests have brainwashed us into thinking certain plants are bad or are 'weeds'. Yet plants like plantain, dandelion, clover help improve soil and are food for pollinators and other creatures. Research papers are numerous and clear in warning of the dangers to nature and to us from using pesticides including those available for purchase by any one of us. 
Grow organically with your lawn, garden, landscape - your home - Earth.






Leave a swath of land unmowed for pollinator habitat. Leave some nearby bare loose, undisturbed soil for ground nesters and nice pithy or hollow stemmed shrubs like elderberry, sumac or raspberries for wood/cavity nesters.

Ensure access to clean shallow water by planting some cup-shaped leave plants or carefully maintaining a shallow birdbath.  

Build affordable housing for local critters: Create a brush pile

Ask your Senators to support the Save America's Pollinators Act
Introduced by Representative John Conyers, H.R. 3040 the Saving America’s Pollinators Act, would suspend the use of neonicotinoid insecticides until the Environmental Protection Agency has determined that they will not have significant adverse effects on bees. This bill was referred to the House Committee on Agriculture. 

=================================
15. Resource Links to help you with native plant ID, care...

Native Plant Databases: RESOURCES to find information about a specific plant or all native plants in your area.
  1. Go Botany  Can also help ID a plant that you do not know the name of. (From New England Plant Trust formerly New England Wild Flower Society)
  2. Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center
  3. Audubon Native Plant Database (Lists bird-friendly native plants via your zip code)
  4. Regional Plant listing (NH/Maine/Vermont)
  5. Missouri Botanical Garden
  6. The Farm Between blog
  7. Farming on the Wild Side: The Evolution of a Regenerative Organic Farm and Nursery. By John and Nancy Hayden of the Farm Between in Jeffersonville, VT.
  8. National Wildlife Federation                                                    By zip code, listing no. of butterfly and moth species supported


RESOURCES for more Native Pollinator Plant information 
  1. The Pollinator Victory Garden by Kim Eirman (Book). Click here for the associated website. I highly recommend this book.
  2. Pollinator Gardens: 8 Easy steps to design a landscape with native plants. 
  3. In the Shade: Gardening with Woodland Plants from the Native Understory
  4. Over 1 Million gardners came together to save pollinators - you can too!
  5. Northeast Pollinator Plants/River Berry Farm has a listing of resources. 
  6. ***Five ways to encourage pollinators. 
  7. Simple tips for creating a Pollinator-friendly landscape.
  8. ***Bees and their habitats in four New England states.  Univ. of Maine.
  9. Hellstrip Plantings: Creating habitat in the space between the sidewalk and the curb. 

  10. Why Native Plants Matter - Audubon
  11. Backyard Bird declines linked to non-native plants. 
  12. The Sixth Great Extinction and our Backyards....
  13. Pollinator Partnerships
  14. EcoBeneficial
  15. Status of Pollinators in North America. National Academy of Sciences
  16. USDA Natural Resources of Conservation Society
  17. Native Plants and Wildlife Gardening. 
  18. Vermont Invasive Listing
  19. Ecologists suggest it is time to rethink the modern lawn. 
  20. Rutland Herald article about threats to bees.              
  21. Status and trends of wild insect pollinators in Vermont and beyond.
  22. iNaturalist: Bumble Bees of Vermont.
  23. Bees, Ants, Wasps, and similar insects of Vermont(Photos and ID) 
  24. Selecting plants for Pollinators  Pollinator Partnership 
  25. Tenth Acre Farm - Permaculture for Suburbs
  26. Wild for Pollinators - A collaboration of KidsGardening org, the Vermont Community Garden Network, and the Intervale Center to raise awareness of the importance of pollinators and to promote the creation of more pollinators and beneficial insect habitats across Vermont and nationally. 
  27. River Berry Farm (Fairfax VT). See their extensive resource links.
  28. Book Review: Native Plants for New England Gardens 
  29. Native seed table - Plant characteristics by Wild Seed Project. Lists light and soil conditions, height, and bloom time.
  30. Gaye Symington: Celebrating Ceres, the myth or the reality. Vt Digger commentary.  
    Excerpts: Celebrating Ceres should remind us the only way Vermont can make headway to reduce soil and nutrient runoff from farms is for everyone to own the problem and make investments that help repair what’s not working. Celebrating Ceres is a chance to celebrate our shared commitment to community – the responsibility we each have to listen carefully to each other, to assume good faith, to understand the conditions and circumstances of our changing world, and [to] give preference to working together to solve problems over judging or accusing. In that way, the celebration of the goddess of agriculture can help us focus on the real and important part agriculture plays in the green hills and silver waters that belong to all of us.
  31. Give your yard a Climate Change Makeover - Audubon Society
  32. Check out BAND OF THE LAND singing Wildflower.
  33. The rapid decline of the Natural World is a crisis even bigger than climate change. 
  34. More edible and landscape-worthy plants of New England
  35. Native hedges and hedgerows: beauty and biodiversity
  36. Soil 4 Climate website
  37. Doug Tallamy recommends cutting the lawn in half. 


====================================================================

16. List of New England Native plants

with wildlife value

and desirable landscaping attributes.
*Note the number of insect species each plant supports.




Common name/Family/Genus/       *No. of Species supported
White Oak: Fagaceae, quercus 534
Willow: Salicaceae, salix - 456
Cherry, Plum: Rosaceae, prunus 456
Birch: Betulaceae, betula 413` 
(150 species in the Birch family, including Hazelnut)
Cottonwood: Salicaceae, populus 368
Crabapple: Rosaceae, malus 311
Blueberry/Cranberry: Ericaceae, vaccinium 288
Maple, Box Elder: Aceraceae, acer 285
Elm: Ulmaceae, ulmus 213
Pine: Pinaceae, pinus 203
Hickory: Juglandaceae, carya 200
Hawthorn: Rosaceae, crataegus 159
Alder: Betulaceae, alnus 156
Spruce: Pinaceae, Picea 156
Ash: Oleaceae, fraxinus 150
Basswood, Linden: Tiliaceae, tilia 150
Filbert, hazelnut: Betulaceae, corylus 131
Walnut, butternut: Juglandaceae juglans
Beech: Fagaceae Fagus 126
Chestnut: Fagaceae castanea 125
From Bringing Nature Home, - How you can sustain wildlife with Native Plants. By Douglas W. Tallamy.
=========================

17. New England planting recommendations from 
New England Wild Flower Society)

Herbaceous perennials, moist and wet sites

Common
Latin
Red Baneberry
Actaea rubra
Wood Anemone
Anemone quinquefolia
Jack-in-the-pulpit
Arisaema triphyllum
Swamp Milkweed
Asclepias
New England Aster
Aster novae-andliae
Water Arum
Calla palustris
Devil's Bit
Chamaelirium luteum
Turtlehead
Chelone glabra
Black Cohosh
Cimicifuga racemosa
Blue Bead Lily
Clintonia borealis
Pink Coreopsis
Coreopsis rosea
Squirrel Corn
Dicentra canadensis
Dutchman's Breeches
Dicentra cucullaria
Yellow Trout Lily
Erythronium americanum
Spotted Joe=Pye Weed
Eupatorium maculatum
boneset
Eupatorium perfoliatum
Closed Gentin
Gentiana clausa
Helen's Flower, Sneezeweed
Helenium autumnale
Round-lobed Hepatica
Hepatica americana
Rose Mallow
Hibiscus moscheutos
Slender Blue Flag
Iris prismatica
Blue Flag Iris
Iris versicolor
Canada Lily
Lilium canadense
Turk's Cap Lily
Lilium superbum
Cardinal Flower
Lobelia cardinalis
Blue Lupine also called Sundial Lupine
Lupinus perennis
Beebalm
Monarda didyma
Wild Bergamot
Monarda fistulosa
Foxglove, Beardtongue
Penstemon digitalis
Hairy Beardtongue
Penstemon hirsutus
Wild Blue Phlox
Phlox divaricata
Wild Sweet William
Phlox maculata
False Dragonhead
Physostegia virginiana
Solomon's Seal
Polygonatum commutatum
American Burnet
Sanguisorba canadnesis
False Solomon's Seal
Smilacina racemosa
Wood Sage
Teucrium canadense
Virgina Spiderwort
Tradescantia virginiana
Culver's Root
Veronicastrum virginicum
Marsh Blue Violet
Viola cucullata
Yellow Violet
Viola pubescens
Golden Alexanders
Zizia aurea
Herbaceous perennials, dry sites

Common
Latin
Canada Anemone
Anemond cadadensis
Wild Columbine
Aquilegia canadensis
Common Milkweed
Asclepias syriaca
Butterfly Weed
Asclepias tuberosa
White Wood Aster
Aster divaricatus
White Heath Aster
Aster ericoides
New York Aster
Aster novi-belgii
Blue Cohosh
Caulophyllum thalictroides
Spotted Wintergreen
Chimaphila maculata
Lesser Yellow Lady's Slipper
Cypripedium parviflorum
White Snakeroot
Eupatoriumrugosum
Wild Geranium
Geranium maculatum
Bluets
Hedyotis caerulea
Oxeye
Heliopsis helianthoides
Sharp-Lobed Hepatica
Hepatica acutiloba
Goldenseal
Hydrastis canadensis
Wood Lily
Lilium philadelphicum
Great Blue Lobelia
Lobbelia siphilitica
Ginseng
Panas quinquefolius
Black-eyed Susan
Rudbeckia hirta
Cutleaf Coneflower
Rudbeckia laciniata
Bloodroot
Sanguinaria canadensis
Blue-eyed Grass
Sisyrinchium angustifolium
Blue-stem Goldenrod
Solidago caesia
Rough-stem Goldenrod
Soldago rugosa
Eastern Foamflower
Tiarella cordifolia
Spiderwort
Tradescantia ohiensis
Purple Trillium
Trillium erectum
White Trillium
Trillium grandiflorum
Large-flowered Bellwort
Uvularia grandiflora
Hookspur Violet
Viola adunca
Birdsfoot Violet
Viola pedata


Conifers

Common
Latin
Balsam Fir
Abies balsamea
Atlantic White Cedar
Chamaecyparis thyoides
Red Cedar
Juniperus virginiana
Tamarack
Larix laricina
White Spruce
Picea glauca
Jack Pine
Pinus banksiana
Red Pine
Pinus resinosa
Pitch Pine
Pinus rigida
White Pine
Pinus strobus
Canada Yew
Taxus canadensis
Arborvitae, Northern White Cedar
Thuja occidentalis
Vines

Common
Latin
American Bittersweet
Celastrus scandens
Limber Honeysuckle
Lonicera dioica
Moonseed
Menispermum canadense
Virginia Creeper
Parthenocissus quinquefolia
Woodbine
Parthenocissus vitacea
Summer Grape
Vitis aestivalis
Fox Grape
Vitis labrusca
Riverbank Grape
Vitis riparia

Streamside plants

Common
Latin

Gray Alder
Alnus incana

Mountain Alder
Alnus viridis

Bog Birch
Betula pumila

Buttonbush
Cephalanthus occidentalis

Leatherleaf
Chamaedaphne calyculata

Sweet Pepper Bush
Clethra alnifolia

Silky Dogwood
Cornus amomum

Leatherwood
Direa palustris

Swamp Doghobble
Eubotrys racemosa

Winterberry
Ilex verticillata

Peachleaf Willow
Salix amygdaloides

Hoary Willow
Salix candida

Pussy Willow
Salix discolor

Sandbar Willow
Salix interior

Black Willow
Salix nigra


Ground covers

Common
Latin
Wild Ginger
Asarum cndadense
Bunchberry
Cornus canadensis
Trailing Arbutus
Epigaea repens
Teaberry, Wintergreen
Gaultheria procumbens
Box Huckleberry
Gaylussacia brachycera
Horizontal Juniper
Juniperus horizontalis
Partridgeberry
Mitchella repens
Moss Pink
Phlox subulata
Mayapple
Podophyllum peltatum
Shrubby Fivefingers
Sibbaldiopsis tridentata
Mountain Cranberry
Vaccinium vitis-idaea
B


arren Strawberry
Waldsteinia fragarioides

shrubs and perennials view https://plantnative.org/rpl-nen.htm
==============================================================
The Insect Apocalypse is Here (NYTimes article)
 Excerpt: 
“What we’re losing is not just the diversity part of biodiversity, but the bio part: life in sheer quantity.”


Audubon Society. audubon.org/news/yards-non-native-plants-create-food-deserts-bugs-and-birds. Assessed 19 Nov. 2018.

Heinrich, Bernd. 2018. A Naturalist At Large - The Best Essays of Bernd Heinrich. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Northeast Pollinator Plants / River Berry Farm. northeastpollinator.com/pages/planting-for-pollinators. Assessed 19 Nov. 2018.

Tallamy, W. Douglas. 2007. Bringing Nature Home - How You Can Sustain Wildlife with Native Plants. Timber Press, 2017.

The Living Landscape (Timber Press 2014)
By Rick Darke, and Doug Tallamy

The Farm Between. mailchi.mp/6bfd84ba6b1c/spring-at-the-farm-between?e=154c171220. Assessed 19 Nov. 2018.

Wild for Pollinators. vcgn.org/what-we-do/wild-for-pollinators/. Assessed 19 Nov. 2018

We Interview the Godfather of Biodiversity.  BirdLife International. Thomas Lovejoy, who coined the phrase "biodiversity", and the urgent need for humanity to start seeing itself as part of nature.

Soils and Climate: From Hidden Depths to Center Stage?

Study Documents Historic Decline in Vermont Bumblebee Population. VT EcoStudies and Gund Institute.

5 weeds you need in your garden

Pesticides are harming bees in every possible way. 

De-lawning America

Song: Big Yellow Taxi - Joni Mitchell
==============================================================

19. Food for Thought Quotes

Perhaps thinking of only ourselves is a behavior we may want to re-examine. Our capitalist society promotes it; our survival may depend on a more social communal view as well as a better understanding and appreciation for our link to nature.

                        In wildness
                 is the preservation
                     of the world.

                              ~Thoreau

Advice from Ed Abbey: Do not burn yourselves out. Be as I am - a reluctant enthusiast, a part-time crusader, a half-hearted fanatic. Save the other half of yourselves and your lives for pleasure and adventure. It is not enough to fight for the land; it is even more important to enjoy it. While you can. While it’s still here. Ed Abbey, early environmentalist.
===================================================================
20. Climate Change - Global Warming Articles

Climate Trauma: Toward a new taxonomy of trauma. 
Excerpts: We should never underestimate the power of individual awareness to promote healing, freeing up latent energies, or the power of shared awareness to transform social structures,

"""At every turn, the smallness contrasts with the vastness of climate-change projects – the mammoth turbines, the horizon-reaching solar farms, the globe encircling clouds of reflective particle that geoengineers envision. The difference In scale creates a difference In the kind of meaning that actions have for people performing them. The meaning of climate-related actions, because they produce no discernible result, is necessarily eschatological; they refer to a Judgment Day we’re hoping to postpone. The mode of meaning in conservation in the Amazon [or Jericho] is Franciscan:  you’re helping something you love, something right in front of you, and you can see the results." The End of the End of the Earth essays by Jonathan Franzen. 

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

What’s the Price of Ignoring Climate Change?

Two climate science writers respond to questions about the economic impacts of rising temperatures.
By Naomi Oreskes and 

Excerpt - 
Stern: One central example would be the restoration of degraded land. That would store carbon in the soil, improve the productivity of land, and make agriculture more robust to difficult weather. It’s mitigation, development, and adaptation altogether. You may want to look at the recent publication “Growing Better” from the Food and Land Use Coalition, which provides a very interesting analysis and many examples.

The Growing Better (PDF) article is packed full of information regarding land for food in a warming world! Bernie

====================================================================
Emailed comments:

  • Thanks for doing this - I think it's a great resource!  I do think it would also be good to find links to sources that cost less than the $100+ the gardening website charges for plants. ~Leslie N. 


Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Make 2022 the year of caring - Conscious reflection of our societal behavior and options for change.

         

    

 2022 The Year of Caring

   How will we move into the New Year?

   We can hope for a better tomorrow, a more sustainable way of living, more equitable use of resources, a more caring, sharing, giving society. We can hope for change in our relationship with the earth, nature, all life. We can hope to stay clear of Covid, and other dangers. 

   But where we have the most leverage is to move to, to live in, a society where others, even those we do not personally know, care. A society or community of mutual caring; a trust that there are people who will care deeply if someone is not safe, healthy, happy. 

   Can we as a community come up with breakthrough ideas for a wholesome life no matter the challenging context or conditions, in the New Year of 2022?  Here are some ideas that I think are worth implementing or discussing related to caring for ourselves, each other, and caring for the earth. 


How will we make connections and have conversations in 2022? What will we do to grow societal and communal trust? 

   Help to fill the isolation gap of today's adolescents (and perhaps other age groups as well). Bring back adult voices, mentorship, and peer companionship. Early on, guide a child on a nature walk, introduce them to one of the arts, fly a kite with them, read together, and discuss the readings… One day of such an investment may well reap dividends for a lifetime.

   Start a Bakery and Cafe Conversation shop in Jericho. Think Paris in Jericho. 

   Bring civics to the forefront. How do other countries (Chile for example) operate? What admirable elements do their (in Chile’s case, evolving) constitutions contain? Would such a study change our views of our own society as a result? What alternative economic and social order might we imagine and what would it be like?

   Does our constitution lend itself to minority rule more than majority rule? How do we want to define democracy given our understanding of society today? What does a system of government shaped by every citizen having the right to a vote of equal value, look like?

   Join or tune in to a town committee or select-board meeting. 

   Need help with something? Ask your town folks and neighbors for help. Our communities are full of talented, caring, kind people willing to share their skills and talents with others. 

   Create a Google doc; join a community group to write a story (fiction or non-fiction) together. What will your theme, topic, message, or plot be?

   Write a personal story or recount an event or experience to share with the community. (I would be happy to post it on the Jericho Community blog). 


How might we help protect our natural world and at the same time become closer to it?

   Adopt a wild bird, mammal, or insect species. Observe wildlife in your backyard. Find out what is there, and when, what they eat, where they nest, what their life cycle is like. Find the joy in discovering LIFE going on in your yard. Share with others including taking photographs of the species and posting your observations on iNaturalist.

   Organize a back-to-nature walk to explore, observe, identify, plants at a local park or woodland.  Sit down with a half-eaten pine cone, or a scouring rush, or a spring ephemeral and ask each member to comment on what they see. Discuss why each plant observed grows the way it does, or how an animal goes about eating it, why it flowers when it does, what species pollinate it… Utilize slow and still and micro observations to heighten your experiences and senses.

   “We won’t see the magnitude of our ignorance, of our excitement, or of the useful knowledge embedded in the living environment until we set out to explore all of it.” ~E.O. Wilson (Entomologist, Biologist)

   Beyond the fascinating insect photos on iNaturalist, there are the colorful flowers (that the insects land on for their photo) which are a special joy to view during these barren white winter months. 

   Get Wild this winter with iNaturalist, eBird, and VT Center for Ecostudies. https://vtstateparks.blogspot.com/2021/12/get-wild-this-winter-with-inaturalist.html

   Start a Ten by Ten movement: Replace a 10x10 foot section of lawn with native wildflowers, and or shrubs/trees. Enjoy the diversity of plants and pollinators they attract. Speak out (and donate) for the conservation and preservation of what little agricultural land there is left in our communities. How can we place more attention on land management to care for the land, be stewards of the land, instead of only extracting from the earth?

   Become an active member in a Jericho/Underhill Plant for Pollinators Society (a community of aspirants, goals group, to discuss strategy on how to promote and engage in pollinator plantings). Perhaps meet every 6 weeks for 1.5hrs to talk, plan, exchange ideas, formulate plans of action.

   Over the last few years, I have shared some of the ways we (in our yard) are working to improve the soil, grow more nutrient-dense vegetables, increase the percentage of native plants in our yard, reduce our lawn size, and create a bird, insect, and wildlife sanctuary as well as trying new ideas like building a hugelkultur. Will you share with us how you are bringing nature home?

As seen on Twitter source unknown, "Aren't you terrified of what 2022 could be like?" Everything is so messed up..."  "I think it will bring flowers." "YES? WHY?"                  "Because I'm planting flowers."


Will we as a society ever come to value free time over things as a measure of wealth?

   Buy less and live more. Determine an experience you would enjoy that would replace a thing you might otherwise purchase. Consider using slow in the activity: Think slow birding, slow walking in the woods or your backyard. Sit or lay down to watch the stars, enjoy a sunset picnic, search for four-leaf clovers, eye the frost formations on plants and on window panes.…

   Open up a tool, appliance, phone, and computer, repair shop. Help reduce our single-use or short-lived product life practices. Open up a garden tool lending shop perhaps in conjunction with the library.

   Exchange goods/resources within the community before buying new and before trashing an item. 

   Health Tip: Switch out CFL for halogen light bulbs. CFLs contain hazardous mercury; hardware stores accept the CFLs for safe disposal. 

   Is it a time to re-discover the pleasures that can be found in experiences and activities close to home? Perhaps that which is most elusive is but illusionary, while that which flies in our face, crawls at our feet, grows in a garden, simmers in a stew pot; that which is carried in a long quiet warm hug, perhaps that which surround us in everyday life, are keys to an unopened chest of pleasure, treasures of simplicity, if only we allow ourselves to see and experience them. How can we become more alert to these opportunities? For each of us individually, life often becomes what we perceive and what we focus upon. 


Will we focus as much on appreciation as on dislocation?

   As a fireman on a long night, with temperatures reaching well below zero degrees, my gear iced over creating a unibody, my hands, nearly frostbit, were practically immobile. Yet what I vividly recall, more than the cold, is the feeling of warmth (accompanied by stinging shock) and appreciation of a Salvation Army volunteer pulling my gloves off for me and holding my hands to thaw and warm them. To this day I relish in appreciation of that gesture. 


Looking within ourselves and our communities: renewed efforts at dialogue.

   If our environment has an effect on who we are, how we behave, this current environment truly is testing us. The less we feel in control, the more challenging it is to be consistent in our character. In 2022 who shall we test out to be? What social norms will survive? Perhaps more importantly, which will evolve? Will we hold hope to return to what we know as normal, or will we envision new ways of living, explore them, and embrace fundamental changes?

   Is it too simplistic to think that as adults we can still have that childhood interest in snowflakes, slippery ice, bright moonlit nights, building a snowman, sledding, skating, playing outdoors until our fingertips and lips turn blue, eating hot cookies, sipping hot chocolate, observing and asking why and how, a thousand times over being forever curious about all forms of life, and laughing at the silliest things, making music with spoons, sticks, old cans, finding joy in nearly everything outdoors in nature?

   And what of our self-identity? Can we use our differences for the betterment of each of us instead of exaggerating or magnifying our differences against each other? Frans De Wall* writes, "...the initial animosity between divergent approaches can be overcome if we realize that each has something to offer that the other lacks." Can a community be defined to include people unlike each other, people seeking shared use of resources, not necessarily known to each other, not all of the same persuasion but all together for each other? And if so, what are the practical workings of such a community?

   I  sense, experience, and witness ‘mutual caring’ and kind behaviors in the community!

   Might we increase our ability to reason, and converse in reasoned, rational, and empirical debate in a respectful tone, to gain societal consensus - as opposed to relying on laws, and therein the not-so-subtle threat of punishment and loss of freedom?

We are aware that certain forms of projected behavior might have troublesome results. - Roland Anderson et al. (2002)

   Without the opportunity and use of reasoned debate on an inclusive scale, do we not forfeit individual freedoms to a degree in which makes fertile ground for those in 'power' (and those with narrow views) to take rule?

Indeed, there is a relationship between a refusal of arbitrary power and inclusive political and reasoned debate.

   According to Katherine Hayhoe, Christian climate scientist, "We use moral judgment to make up our minds and then use our brains to find reasons that explain why we’re right. There’s no way to separate the emotional from the logical". Does this help us understand how we make decisions?

   After reflecting and discussing a topic, do we make decisions based on calculations of cost-benefit, individual as well as community impact, or possible impact to others? Do we reflect on the relationship of the decision to our values and what we consider ourselves to be as individuals and as distinct groups?

"The western settler mindset was "I have rights." The mindset of ingenious people is "I have obligations.- Stan Rushworth, Cherokee elder

    Are we a product of our environment or is our environment a product of who we are? Disruption seems to abound, change inevitable; can we only imagine retaining the status quo, can we only hope for a return to “normal”? Or can we utilize the tectonic shifts to break the ice of customs, habits, cultural traditions that no longer serve us and who we are as human beings?

   A group of folks came by to view our non-traditional yard of pathways twisting through a diverse array of plants. One expressed to us “Thank You, you have given me ‘permission’ to do this (less lawn to mow, less weeding, more natural nature-friendly landscape in my yard)”.  Breakthroughs can come from re-examining axioms*. 

* For the times do, in fact, change. They change relentlessly. Inevitably. Inventively. And as they change, they set into bright relief not only outmoded honorifics and hunting horns, but silver summoners and mother-of-pearl opera glasses and all manner of carefully crafted things [including manicured pedigreed monoculture lawns,] that have outlived their usefulness. - A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles

   These meandering thoughts are partly based on my readings, my perceptions, and my attempt to look beyond what is, and what went wrong. To properly stir the mix, to allow breakthrough ideas to float to the top, we need many voices, many creative thinkers discussing and debating ways to break some of the molds and create new trends.  

   What are your ideas for being caring and kind to the earth, nature, yourself, and your fellow community members? How will you remain well? What really makes you happy? How will we empathetically take care of each other? How will you vibrantly embrace, experience, and taste life in 2022? 

Hoping you laugh, dream, try and do good in the New Year

~Bernie

                        See reader comments below.

I am recycling last year's photo so just add one to the number!                        What was your favorite moment of 2021?

If philosophical explorations are not your taste, then let us agree that to reach someplace one must be able to visualize that place, either as it is or as one would like it to be. - Bernie

(I think Maeve's community post below is a good example of reasoned and persuasive dialogue. - Bernie)

Who Benefits When We Wear a Mask? 

As posted on FPF by Maeve K., Jericho

     I was going to stay out of the FPF mask debate because I'm not sure it isn't more divisive than helpful. However, I think there's something vitally important that hasn't been said yet to those in our area who don't want to wear a mask. Your individual freedom is a wonderful thing, to be celebrated and loved. But the next time you're in a store without a mask on, the next time you're standing outdoors maskless and get within a few feet of another person, take a good look at that other person. See that robust-looking fellow in the store? His young wife at home just finished a course of therapy for leukemia. She has no immune system at all. She and her husband know that even if he's triple-vaccinated and feels absolutely great, he could carry the COVID virus to her. It might not kill her, but it could set back her recovery a full year or more. - See those two little girls, giggling as they follow their mother around? The mask on one of them is tipped sideways, exposing part of her mouth. She's too young to have had any vaccine yet. Try to imagine her in an ICU bed, unable to breathe and terrified. - See that guy by the meat counter? He has only part of a lung after suffering an injury in Afghanistan. Even a "mild breakthrough case" of COVID would probably kill him. - See that woman with a cane? She just turned 85. She loves life and she's not ready to leave it. - We wear masks to protect ourselves, yes. But we also wear them to protect those who are more vulnerable than we are. Thank you.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Readers Comments

Hi Bernie,

I've thought about this too. It seems that humans get into real trouble when we resort to "us" vs "them" and give in to the ease of "group-think". That always leads to hate and/or abuse seems to me.

I think one solution is to hold onto your personal humanity no matter what others do or say and to recognize that each and every human is interesting and valuable. To see people as individuals and smile and make eye contact with whomever you meet and, if possible, find out something about them. We all want to know we matter...I think that is how we can make things a little better along the way.

~ S.S. Jericho

-------------------------------------------------------

PostScript from Bernie

Though fear and anxiety are understandable in today's environment, we need not be stuck in isolation and change-resistant bunkers. Will you utilize my essay as a catalyst to express your views and ideas, with your moral compass, to describe your imaginative roadmap to 2022 and beyond? Admittedly I often can’t see the forest for the trees. I invite you to accept my invitation with alacrity; with your help and insight perhaps we can all see our way forward more clearly. 

Cheers as we find our (new) way in 2022

Bernie

* Frans De Wall author of "Are we smart enough to know how smart animals are?

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Further postscript 1/15/222

FPF posting by Bernie 

My response to those who email me with a different view (on the masking) is that I hope as a community we all care for each other even when we do not agree, that we probably agree on many things and that it is important that we all can describe our positions - why and how we got to them. I think this dialogue in the public realm can help build social consensus, release and deflate some built-up angst, and encourage folks to abide by social well-being measures that protect and care for the community as well as for the individual.

I am no debater, nor speaker, but I do yearn for what I read was a culture in the indigenous society (or at least many of them in NA) whereby the community spent a great deal of time discussing community affairs every day. As I understand, they put great practice and exercise into eloquent and powered reasoned arguments and debate.

There was a relationship between their refusal of arbitrary power and inclusive political and reasoned debate.

I hope we (society) will all learn such a valuable cultural skillset (engage in self-conscious reasoned debate). No compulsion, but social adherence created thru reasoned debate, persuasive arguments, and the establishment of social consensus. In addition, a society of communities that have a system of mutual aid, equality, minimal conflict, and who celebrate each other's differences.

We all have the capacity to care for and be committed to all folks in our community.

I again invite folks to read my posting "Make 2022 the year of caring - Conscious reflection of our societal behavior and options for change" (I have revised and updated based on feedback). I hope this can be a stimulus for further discussion of how we can improve community dialogue, and lower animosity between divergent approaches and opinions.

https://jerichovermont.blogspot.com/2021/12/2022-year-of-caring.html

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Friday, December 17, 2021

Christmas Eve: lost package, found package

   It was December 24 and all was still except for the snowflakes drifting lazily down each, arriving exactly where they were supposed to go, the last deliveries from a tumultuous month of deliveries. 

   All the UPS, FedEx, and USPS trucks were nestled in their respective garages. Their exhausted drivers were deep under covers for a well-deserved rest; each one dreaming of house numbers transposed, street names misspelled, and misguided GPS directions, as mountains of packages descended from the sky. 

 
Only one driver remained on duty. Having rested all year, this driver was spry and active and moving at full speed - in spite of his very old age as one could guess by his white beard, which matched his white gloves and fluffy coat collar. 


   He had finished his run in record time, having delivered at least one package to every boy and girl in Jericho, Underhill, and Richmond.  His rosy cheeks and a belly full of chocolate and cookies gave testament to his reward. He chuckled at first, then rolled out a full belly laugh to think of the joy and happiness that filled the air as kindness drifted out of chimneys, more on this night than any other. And this gave him hope, as all acts of kindness do. 

   Just as he was about to turn north to head home, an FPF (Front Porch Forum) post flashed on his sleigh dashboard. The message read, "LOST PACKAGE"! "Oh, dear, dear me", he thought, "tonight of all nights, we cannot have any, no not any lost packages." 

   But before he could re-check his delivery list - a list with thousands of names and addresses - another "Lost Package" notice popped up, then another, and another, then ten more, then dozens that announced "MISSING PACKAGE", and one that said, "DELIVERED TO Johnny, but BELONGS TO Sally". The messages started appearing so fast he could hardly finish reading one before another appeared. Some of the lost packages were showing up as "FOUND PACKAGE, if your name is so and so, we have your package". The screen was scrolling so fast now it became just a blur, a flurry of misdelivered packages on Christmas Eve. This had never happened before, not on Christmas Eve. 

   In a near panic, he thought, "With only a few precious hours left before Christmas, what to do? And how could this happen? An errant disgruntled Elf? An uncalibrated GPS? Did my glasses fog up? I knew those signs did not look right." 

   "No matter, the important thing now is to deliver these misdirected packages each, to their rightful child. But how with so little time left?" Santa looked over at his reindeer and realized even if he was still spry, they were wasted from pulling the sleigh all night. He could not ask them to do much more tonight. 

   "There is only one thing to do," he thought. "I must call on the goodwill of these communities to help me. These boxes, each carefully filled with a gift, stuffed with love and care, sealed tightly with the glue of a warm hug, addressed in large block letters with the utmost accuracy and legibility, must - they must - be delivered to the correct address by Christmas morning."   



   And so, as increasing snowflakes clustered together as though holding hands (severely limiting visibility), Santa abandoned his sleigh and began knocking on doors, walking from house to house, asking for help. 



   Luckily some of the first houses he came to were those of UPS, FedEx, and USPS drivers who, after wakening and quickly downing some coffee, gathered around Santa to see how they could help. 

   Soon neighbors were stepping out to see what all the flashlights and scurrying was all about, and once informed of the lost and found and misdirected packages, jumped in to search and match lost and found with the correct deliverance. 

   Within an hour hundreds of folks were making corrected deliveries, only not through chimneys but by knocking softly on doors to deliver in person. And a strange thing happened as a result of the lost and found on Christmas Eve. Neighbors got to know each other a little bit better. Some were invited in for cookies and hot chocolate. Some made plans to have a skating or sledding outing together to allow whole families to meet up. And the FedEx and UPS and USPS folks gained additional respect for helping out, especially given the knowledge that even Santa can occasionally make a delivery error. 

   Santa finally made it home, mission accomplished, as the clock struck the early hours of Christmas morning. Mrs. Claus had been very worried, and when Santa had told her the whole story they both shared a long-lasting hug, knowing that even when things go wrong, even when a problem is bigger than any one person, community - folks working together to help each other - gets the job done. Ribbons on packages are pretty and presents are fine, but the kindness that goes into those packages is the most important gift of all. 

   As the last snowflakes fell from the sky, an errant wind threatened to blow them off course. Just then two neighbors stepped out onto their porches to wish each other a Merry Christmas, and the warm air, some would say the warm air of kindness, drifted out of the two houses and combined, pushing back against the cold breeze. allowing the snowflakes to land just where they were supposed to go. 

Wishing you all, kindness received just where and when you need it.
~Bernie



POSTSCRIPT: I think Seven Days "Free Will Astrology" for Scorpio, hit it right on the mark for me: 
"Prolific author Ray Bradbury liked to give advice to those with a strong need to express their imaginative originality. Since I expect you will be a person like that in 2022, I'll convey to you one of his exhortations. He wrote, "If you want to create you must be the most sublime fool that God ever turned out and sent rambling. I wish you a wrestling match with your Creative Muse that will last a lifetime. I wish craziness and foolishness and madness upon you." Keep in mind that Bradbury was referring to constructive craziness, wise foolishness, and divine madness."   

Saturday, December 4, 2021

Ice Crystal Photos - Jericho, Vermont

 

Temperature is so low as to have dropped off the bottom of our thermometer.        Did you ever have a thermometer like that?















Truly though it was cold enough to create glass shards along stems.











   No telling what critter became frozen in place just as it reached for the leaf.



                                         Glass foilage


                                          Snowball of shards of glass from a broken mirror. 



                                Signpost pointing south



Take a walk on the wild side. Find your pleasure in the small and the large of nature. If the cold temperatures get you down, just turn the thermometer upside down!

Bernie

Snowflake Bentley photo and letter discovered


Snowflake Bentley Photo and Letter Discovered
by Louise Miglionico
Jericho Historical Society

     The Blue Hill Observatory (BHO) in Milton, Massachusetts is home to the oldest continuous weather recordings in North America and maintains a plethora of weather observations from across the country. Recently, the Jericho Historical Society was contacted by Dr. William Minsinger, President of the Blue Hill Observatory Board of Directors, indicating that they had uncovered a letter written by Snowflake Bentley to the then director of the BHO, Dr. Charles Franklin Brooks. 

     Dr. Brooks was also the founder of the American Meteorological Society and was quite helpful in the publishing of Bentley's iconic Snow Crystals book which contains more than 2400 photo plates of snowflakes, frost, and dew taken by Bentley. The book is still in publication today. In the document, Bentley expresses his appreciation for Dr. Brooks' praise of Snow Crystals which had been sent in a letter to Bentley which was also accompanied by a clipping concerning the book. 

     The letter is dated December 6, 1931, which is shortly after 'Snow Crystals' was published in November 1931. Bentley passed away from pneumonia shortly thereafter. He had very little time to relish his crowning achievement. 

     In the letter pictured (below), Bentley also mentions appreciating hearing Brooks' daughter sing which suggests that Bentley had visited the Brooks home in Massachusetts. Bentley himself was an accomplished musician playing piano, clarinet, cornet, and violin. 

     Also discovered was a photo (right) of Bentley from the album of Eleanor Stabler Brooks in the family section suggesting that the Brooks family may have visited Bentley at his Jericho farm. Bentley was known for his pleasant nature which is evident in the smiling photo of him. 

     The BHO is currently undergoing a major renovation and will be adding an exhibit dedicated to Snowflake Bentley. The Jericho Historical Society will be providing a glass plate negative, a magic lantern slide, and snowflake photos on permanent loan for this exhibit. 

     To learn more about Snowflake Bentley go to www. snowflakebentley.com or visit the Snowflake Bentley Exhibit at the Old Red Mill on Rte 15 in Jericho, Vermont. 



The Jericho Historical Society owns the Old Red Mill on Route 15 in Jericho Corners Historic District. The mill is on the National Register of Historic Places. In addition to being a mill museum, it is also the home to the “Snowflake” Bentley Museum.
The Old Mill Craft shop sells crafts and art of local artisans as well as official Snowflake Bentley prints, pewter ornaments, and pewter jewelry. The proceeds from sales at the shop help with the expenses of preserving this iconic building.
The Jericho Historical Society welcomes volunteers to help with the involved work required of maintaining the facility. The Jericho Historical Society also maintains Jericho History archives. 



Photos above contributed by Louise Miglionico.