People are planting shrubs and arranging pots in a garden plot near trees and parked cars on a sunny day.
Volunteers working on a pollinator garden in Charlotte at the corner of Philo Road and Spear Street in May 2023. Photo courtesy Julie Parker-Dickinson

Kate Kampner is a reporter with Community News Service, part of the University of Vermontโ€™s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.

Julie Parker-Dickinson, a master gardener and a second-grade teacher, was encouraging kids about their futures back in 2017 when she realized something: She didnโ€™t feel she was doing anything to ensure a bright future would still be there for them.

She decided to plant a garden at Quinlanโ€™s Covered Bridge in Charlotte, where she lives, the first of many around town that she would fill with native species. The idea was to build a better food source for local pollinators, who play a vital role in helping plants reproduce. One day, she heard from Bethany Barry, who wanted to help pollinators in Addison County. She thought Parker-Dickinson could be a good partner.

Now both Parker-Dickinson and Barry are part of Pollinator Pathway, a network of volunteers across 18 states who plant, track and locate gardens of native, non-invasive plants and flowers. Their mission is to reduce the distance many pollinators like bees and butterflies need to go to get nectar and pollen. The gardens, in effect, form a highway for them. Parker-Dickinson runs the Charlotte effort, Barry the one in Addison County โ€” two of six in Vermont.

The four principles of the pathways, said Barry, are to remove invasives, plant natives, abstain from pesticides and rethink your lawn. 

More extreme heat caused by increasing climate change makes it more tiring for pollinators to travel around. At the same time, they must travel longer distances than theyโ€™re used to because of how many lawns and homes have replaced natural landscapes. 

Monarch butterflies might be able to fly 2,500 miles when migrating, but Parker-Dickinson said the average butterfly is probably going no more than a mile to find food. 

โ€œThe pathway is meant to be a connector,โ€ she said, comparing it to a grocery store where there would normally be a food desert. 

Parker-Dickinson has planted gardens by Monkton Central School, on a corner on the way into Charlotte from the south and at the Charlotte Library. One project sheโ€™s currently working on is at the school, where she teaches and is maintaining a strip filled with native plants, sunflowers and zinnias in the parking lot. 

Some plants she uses include Culverโ€™s root, butterfly weed, mountain mint and bee balm โ€” all native to Vermont. 

Parker-Dickinson said there are 45 million acres of lawn in the U.S. โ€œIf a portion was committed to pollinators, we could really do something about the climate crisis,โ€ she said. 

โ€œNobody gets paid for this. Itโ€™s just something we can do to help,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s been really rewarding in terms of the whole community to take pride in.โ€ 

Barry said bringing people in her community together has been an important part of the project. โ€œItโ€™s all about educating ourselves and others,โ€ she said. She works with nine towns in Addison County.

Barry has given presentations and webinars across the state about pollinators and native plants. Thatโ€™s on top of working on a pollinator garden next to Porter Medical Center in Middlebury and a garden in Weybridge near the Pulp Mill Covered Bridge. 

โ€œIf I was inside โ€ฆ I would be missing out on whatโ€™s happening with nature,โ€ Barry said.

One thing sheโ€™s noticed in the wider world through getting out in the garden is a decline in monarch butterflies, something Parker-Dickinson and other Pathway members also described. 

โ€œIโ€™ve heard a lot of despair about our planet, about whatโ€™s happening, but then I bring it back to what can I do right here, right now, and this is making a difference,โ€ she said. โ€œIt may not show to anyone else, but I know that Iโ€™m creating a resting place and food and habitat and adding to the biodiversity.โ€ 

A small, lush field with various wildflowers and green plants under a partially cloudy sky. Trees and bushes surround the area. A gravel path runs along the edge.
The garden at Quinlanโ€™s Covered Bridge in Charlotte in August 2023. Photo courtesy Julie Parker-Dickinson

Debra Sprague, who helps maintain the Monkton Pathway, believes there are aesthetic benefits to growing native and wildflower-filled gardens instead of curating lawns or sewing gardens with invasive species. 

โ€œThe thing with native plants is, you have to pay attention to whatโ€™s good for the pollinators, and that means not pulling everything out in the fall and making it really neat and tidy,โ€ she said. โ€œIt should be messy, and some people donโ€™t like messy.โ€ 

Similar to Barry, she has found that paying closer attention to pollinators has strengthened her success in the garden. 

โ€œThe wildflowers in May, looking for those, watching for insects, the different butterflies and bees and all the different creatures out there,โ€ she said, โ€œreally just being outside in the garden makes you see more of those things and appreciate them.โ€ 

Denise Greene and Melissa Jordan of the Lamoille County Pollinator Pathway are approaching their second growing season. Greene is based in Hyde Park, Jordan in Morrisville, and both have backgrounds in gardening, maintaining land and even worm farming. 

โ€œAs we continue along, PPLC will continue to grow and have opportunities to transform public spaces as well as private spaces,โ€ Jordan said. โ€œThereโ€™s a new wave happening, a new wave of thinking.โ€ 

The Lamoille pathway has provided garden tours, advice on starting gardens and recommendations for plant and soil care. Greene said sheโ€™s even shown people how to solarize weeds โ€” putting plastic over a garden bed, field or lawn and leaving it for the summer, effectively cooking the weed seeds and providing a clean slate in the fall. 

โ€œWeโ€™re really available for any businesses or property owners or municipal properties to help work, to give volunteers or to give technical advice,โ€ she said. 

Their group works with Peter Danforth, director of the Lamoille County Conservation District, on environmental advocacy.

Theyโ€™ve done lots of planting around Oxbow Park in Morrisville and have converted Elsa French Park in Hyde Park from mostly lawn to freely growing wild species. Greene said with native meadows in place, prairie grasses that have robust root systems can better absorb rain water. 

Greene and Jordan emphasize that anyone can do it โ€” even people who live in apartments without their own green spaces. Thatโ€™s the reason why their group lets apartment residents register potted plants as part of the local pathway. 

โ€œWe live in such a beautiful and diverse planet, and we just want to do everything we can to keep it that way and not just disappear. And that means holding people accountable,โ€ said Greene. 

She added: โ€œSome people like politics, and some people like just to plant flowers.โ€