Farms.com Home   News

GROWMARK System Offering Pollinator Garden Program

Honey bees and other pollinators play an important role in the agricultural ecosystem. These same pollinators are under stress from a number of factors: pests, disease, lack of habitat, and more. The GROWMARK System would like to help youth organizations do their part to help sustain and increase honey bee populations.

This is the eighth year of the program, open to 4-H clubs, Ag in the Classroom groups, FFA chapters, and other youth organizations throughout the United States. Groups who previously participated in the program have been automatically re-enrolled.

Organizations are asked to locate a public place and secure permission to plant a pollinator garden prior to filling out an application. This could be in a park, near a school, along a well-traveled road, at the county fairgrounds, or any visible location. GROWMARK will provide enough seed to plant approximately a 700 square foot area, as well as educational signage to be placed around the garden.

“More than 300 youth organizations have been part of the program since 2016,” said Karen Jones, GROWMARK Youth and Young Producer Specialist. “Growing the number of pollinator gardens this year will help provide even more habitat for bees and other beneficial pollinator species.”

Clubs wishing to participate should fill out the online application by March 8, 2023: http://bit.ly/2023GMKPollinator Questions may be directed to Karen Jones, kjones@growmark.com or 309-557-6184.About GROWMARK:

GROWMARK is an agricultural cooperative serving almost 400,000 customers across North America, providing agronomy, energy, facility engineering and construction, and logistics products and services, as well as grain marketing and risk management services. Headquartered in Bloomington, Illinois, GROWMARK owns the FS trademark, which is used by member cooperatives. More information is available at growmark.com.

Source : Growmark

Trending Video

Weekly Forecast - Eric Hunt

Video: Weekly Forecast - Eric Hunt

It seems like the temperatures are starting to crank up now that we're into July. How are things looking as we turn to the week ahead? Nebraska Extension Ag Climatologist Eric Hunt has your forecast.