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POLLINATOR PATHWAYS
A NEW GARDEN AT THE WARNER LIBRARY
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By Mai Mai Margules
On the snow-covered slope of Warner Library’s lawn facing Wildey Street, a few bright pink garden ties herald the site of an exciting new addition to Warner Library -- a pollinator garden.
In April, TEAC in collaboration with Friends of the Library and dedicated volunteers will break ground on a 15’ x 10’ native plant garden. This demonstration garden will benefit pollinators and residents alike. For our pollinators it will create much needed habitat and food sources. For our residents it will bring joy and awareness of the vital role that pollinators play within our ecosystem.

Warner Library is an ideal location for this endeavor. As a vital and dynamic part of the Tarrytown/Sleepy Hollow Villages, Warner is on the vanguard in educating our community and bringing awareness to important issues. The Library engages residents of all ages and walks of life with its wonderful array of resources. The new garden will allow learning to begin even before entering the building.
The creation of the garden will serve as a live learning experience for visitors. The garden will contain host plants such as milkweeds, wild petunia and red twig dogwood that provide vital sustenance to caterpillars. Mountain mint, hyssop and echinacea will deliver additional nectar and pollen to visiting pollinators. A background of native grasses will shelter insects and birds and bring year round visual interest.
Signage will identify the plants and the role that each plays in the local ecosystem. Warner’s extensive seed library will have pollinator friendly seeds available to those who want to create their own pollinator gardens. Informational links and resources will be readily available so that all of us can “connect the dots” both in planting pollinator gardens and in spreading the word as to their importance.
As a demonstration garden we will be championing many aspects of environmentally friendly gardening. Garden soil will be amended with compost from TEAC’s food scrap recycling program. We will use shredded leaves mixed with compost to make a terrific mulch that is cost effective and doesn't contain harmful chemicals. No pesticides, herbicides or chemical fertilizers will be used. After summer blooms have faded, perennial stalks and grasses will be left standing to provide habitat for insects and overwintering birds. The garden will thus support the living world year round.
We need your help to successfully launch this project! TEAC and Friends of Warner Library will kick off a Go Fund Me campaign this week titled Bees and Books --- Warner Library’s Pollinator Garden. Please donate what you can and share the link with friends. This is an incredible opportunity to showcase important environmental issues to a large audience in the heart of our Village. We have a committed group of volunteers who will plant and maintain the garden but we must raise money for necessary supplies and plants. Please help us save our endangered pollinators and start a call to action so that pollinator gardens become the norm rather than the novelty. We thank you in advance for your support.

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