Pollinator Pathways: Connecting your yard to the bigger picture

Photo: Plant NOVA Natives

Article by Eileen Ellsworth

Imagine the world as it once was. Verdant forests, buzzing meadows, and numerous other natural areas were immense, whole, and pulsing with life. Over time, human activity emerged and carved the natural world into disconnected, even isolated parts. Ecologists refer to this process as habitat fragmentation. You can see it in urban settings where green parks are biological islands surrounded by buildings and concrete roads. You can see it in rural settings where agriculture simplifies ecosystems and amplifies the populations of only certain insects to the detriment of others. You can see it in suburban settings where developments destroy natural habitats and where landscapes are “replaced” with all non-native species.

Large and mostly undisturbed ecosystems can still be found, of course, especially in our beloved national parks and forests. But even they are distant from each other, understaffed, and too small in total acreage to sustain the biodiversity of the continent. Any solution to the problem of habitat fragmentation and the resulting loss of biodiversity, therefore, must be found right here among the throng of human life – where we live, work and play.

Is it possible to reconnect isolated fragments in our urban, suburban, and rural settings to benefit pollinators and the creatures that depend upon them? That was the question that sparked the “pollinator pathway” concept in 2007 by Sarah Bergmann, an artist living in Seattle. As part of a social and ecological project, she envisioned and described a network of native gardens that could create a “pathway” to support pollinators. This core idea led to the creation of a nonprofit – Pollinator Pathway – by Donna Merrill, a conservationist from Wilton, Connecticut, in 2017. Since then, the group has helped inspire and launch a national movement.

The idea is a powerful one. Anybody can take part, even at a novice level. There are very few barriers to participation. If all you have is one native tree or a  small pollinator garden – preferably one with some native plants – it’s a start, and you can build from there.

The main goal of a pollinator pathway is to reinstate connectivity between several small but healthy habitats. A single native tree can support bees and other pollinators as much if not more than a flower garden. Building a pollinator pathway on your street, for example, may include adding a new native tree or two, or creating new healthy gardens on communal grounds or private property as “stepping stones” along the way. It may include the expansion of existing native plant areas. Removal of invasives that disrupt the pathway will certainly be part of the plan, along with pledges to avoid all broadcast pesticides including mosquito and tick sprays. Only unpoisoned ecosystems can be included in the work.

Many communities across America are already building pollinator pathways and proving the concept. You can recruit participants on your own, or have fun working with like-minded people to muster engagement. Hold a kick-off meeting to build some early momentum. Don’t over plan. Take some early action, starting with 1 or 2 easy planting projects, then see where it takes you.

On a new webpage just launched by Plant NOVA Natives you will find some handy tools to help you build a pollinator pathway in your neighborhood or community. They include:

  • A tip sheet for pollinator pathway organizers
  • Instructions for ordering medallion signs that will be delivered to your house from Plant NOVA Natives for you and your participants. If you are in Northern Virginia, we will have the sign company mail you the first five for free.
  • Ideas for how to pitch the idea to the folks you want to engage
  • Pollinator Pathway handouts to leave with your neighbor.

Join the movement! Let’s work with our neighbors and friends to connect the fragments, rebuild some beneficial habitats, and heal the everyday ecosystems that surround us. Their resilience is astonishing. New life, activity, and hope will certainly emerge, along with a new joy in being part of something much bigger than our own backyards.

Hiss-teria Averted: Staying Safe Around Snakes, Webinar July 16th

Photo: NVCT

Wednesday, July 16, 2025
12 PM – 1 PM
Zoom link provided upon registration

Snakes often get a bad rap, but we share this land with them and they have important roles in their respective environments. In this webinar, learn how to properly identify, handle and avoid unpleasant interactions with native snakes of Virginia. Don’t worry, this session is completely virtual, so you won’t have to test your limits too much!

Brought to you by Northern Virginia Conservation Trust’s Nearby Nature Network. Presented by Bill Crisp of K2C Wildlife Encounters.

Celebrating a FMN 2025 Spring Basic Training Graduates

Photo: FMN Mary Ann Bush, FMN Spring Grads – June162025

On Monday June 16, we proudly celebrated the graduation of a passionate and dedicated group of students from our Master Naturalist Basic training program. What began as a shared curiosity about the natural world has transformed into a community of informed and enthusiastic stewards of our local environment.

Over the past several months, these individuals immersed themselves in both classroom learning, and field trips which facilitated hands-on, experiential learning opportunities outside of the classroom. They learned not only about native ecosystems and species, but also how to be a part of natural resource conservation in the community

Graduation is more than a milestone—it’s a beginning. These new graduates are now equipped and eager to take on a wide range of volunteer opportunities: leading nature hikes, restoring habitats, monitoring wildlife, educating the public, and much more. Each graduate brings a unique voice and skillset, and together they form a force for good in our natural communities.

To our newest graduates, we can’t wait to see where your curiosity, compassion, and commitment take you next!

Here are the 2025 Spring FMN Basic Training Graduates:
Alsegaf, Kathy
Baucom, Celeste
Borghi, Aurora
Bretz, Kevin
Colby, Charles
Curley, Christina
De Nardi, Mia
Edwards, Eren
Grass, Nancy
Gravatt, Peyton
Newberry, Tucker
Racine, “Anna Virginia “”Hope”””
Racine, James
Smyth, Trish
Zavala, Andy
Malcolm Macniel
Elliff, Rachel
Conway Dodge
A special acknowledgement goes out to three students who have achieved their initial certification by their graduation date:
Mia De Nardi, Aurora Borghi and Andy Zavala

Congratulations, and welcome to a lifelong journey of learning, service, and connection to the natural world!

 

Mason Neck Kayak Adventures – 2025

Announcing the ‘FMN only’ summer Kayak Tours at Mason Neck State Park!

June Evening: Saturday, 6/28/25, 6:00-8:00 PM
July Evening: Friday, 7/25/25, 6:00-8:00 PM
August Morning: Sunday, 8/24/25, 9:00-11:00 AM
September Afternoon: Sunday, 9/07/25, 1:00-3:00 PM

The 2 hour tours guide paddlers out into Belmont Bay and up Kane’s Creek into the heart of the park that can only be seen via the water. Explore the plants and animals found along the way; discuss the importance of wetlands; learn the history of Manson Neck peninsula; and enjoy the beauty and serenity of floating among the lilly pads, surrounded by forest.

*Guests please arrive 30 minutes prior to start time to gear up*

These are FMN only tours. Limit 10 per tour.
Registration is free and must be done via BI calendar.
Once the tour fills, registration auto-locks and it disappears from the Opportunities Calendar but remains on the Opportunities List.

All guests are required to use park provided kayaks and paddles.
PFDs are provided but you may bring your own. Personal PFDs must be Coast Guard approved/labeled Type III or better.

Appropriate clothing for the weather, activity level, and closed-toe shoes are encouraged. Below is a park provided link to a guide for recommended kayak-clothing. https://www.rei.com/learn/expert-advice/kayaking-what-to-wear.html

To register:
1. Login to BI and click on your ‘Opportunities’ tab.
2. Select ‘Opportunity Calendar’ from the pull-down menu.
3. Find event in the displayed calendar; Click it to see event details.
4. To sign up, Click the ‘Sign Up’ box in the lower right. This automatically signs you up and puts the event on your personal calendar.
5. To claim 2.5 CE hours: please use All Continuing Education -> FMN All other Chapter Training, as the Approved Org.

Mason Neck Kayak – photo JaneEllen Saums

A thought provoking prose to encourage this tour is Charles Dickens’ luminous writing about the beauty of the natural world – “The freshness of the day, the singing of the birds, the beauty of the waving grass, the deep green leaves, the wild flowers, and the thousand exquisite scents and sounds that floated in the air— deep joys to most of us, but even more so to those whose life is in a crowd or who live solitarily in great cities as in the bucket of a human well—sunk into their breasts and made them very glad.”

As you push off from the shore, inhale deeply, relax, immerse yourself in the natural world, and become “very glad”.

Katy Johnson – The New FMN Liaison to FCPA

As many readers already know, FMN has maintained a signed Cooperative Agreement (CA) with Fairfax County Park Authority (FCPA) since chapter inception in 2007. Annually, FMN contributes more collective volunteer hours towards FCPA Activity Codes than any other single partner organization.
In turn, FCPA provides FMN with course instructors, meeting facilities, volunteer opportunities, and access to parks for field trips and CE hikes.
In 2024, FMN reported over 5300 volunteer hours at 12 individual FCPA sites.

The CA identifies liaison roles and responsibilities for both FCPA and FMN. Together the liaisons coordinate activities, acquire field trip permits, identify opportunities, and maintain open communications between the orgs. Currently, Tammy Schwab is the FCPA liaison and Katy Johnson is the newly designated FMN liaison. Katy takes over from Marilyn Schroeder who held the FMN role since 2007, when she helped establish the initial CA.

FMN Katy Johnson with a trillium – photo Katy Johnson

Katy graduated FMN training in 2021. Since then she has contributed over 600 service hours and is also the POC for FMN activities in Fairfax City. She is very familiar with the functional liaison responsibilities defined in the CA by virtue of her similar role in another local organization, Northern Virginia Mineral Club. Katy joined NVMC and FMN because she believes in their missions – to educate and spread an understanding of the importance of natural resources in our everyday lives.

Going forward please direct questions regarding FCPA opportunities to Katy

FMN Katy Johnson rockhounding – photo Katy Johnson

(katynor@gmail.com). FMN has 10 individually defined Activity Codes for FCPA. We look forward to continuing our long time association with Fairfax County Parks. Thank you Katy!

FYI – Additional Chapter Partners:
The formal CA with FCPA is the only signed agreement our chapter maintains. We do, however, have other Chapter Partners and we strive to identify points of contact for each of them in their corresponding BI Activity Code descriptions.
For example, FMN service hours for Fairfax Tree Stewards may be recorded using Activity Code S405. The FMN POC for FTS is found in the S405 Activity Code description in BI, along with additional details so you may ask questions of someone directly involved with that organization.

The FMN web site lists several chapter partners and links to their sites for general information. FMN POCs and specific FMN Activity details will normally only be found in the BI Activity Code Description, as described above for S405.

Of course if all else fails, please direct activity code catalog and CE questions to the Hours/CE co-chairs and we will work with you to clear the fog.
Hours/CE email – FMNcontinuingED@gmail.com

Acknowledgements:

Cover photo – two handsome KATYdids liaising on a hibiscus. Photo Jerry Nissley

Registration Is Now Open for The Northern Virginia Urban Forest Roundtable on July 31!

Logo: Courtesy Virginia’s Urban Forest Council

Thursday, July 31, 2025
9:00AM – 4:00PM

Registration Fee: $55.00 (Registration fee includes continental breakfast and lunch.)

Registration and additional conference information.

The Woodlands at Algonkian
47001 Fairway Drive
Sterling VA  20165

Rooted in Retention – Sustaining the Present, Planting the Future

Complete Agenda

Highlights from the agenda:

*12:00 – 1:00 Combining Aesthetics & Ecology in Urban Forests: How Native Ecoregions Inform Process
Keith Tomlinson, Interpretive Naturalist, Smithsonian Associates Study Leader
The regional native forests we see today tell a compelling story that informs what trees we plant and conserve in urban environments.
We’ll look at our native trees through the holistic lens of ecoregions as related to urban forest. This approach illustrates the foundational
role of native trees and forests in urbanized environments. Fostering the aesthetic and ecological impact of urban forests is more
important than ever as we work in a continuum of environmental change.

 

*Station 1: Under the Forest Canopy: A Journey with Fungi
Mycological Association of Washington, DC – Learn to identify different species, understand their vital role in the ecosystem, and
discover the incredible diversity of shapes, colors, and textures that fungi offer. Whether you’re a curious beginner or a seasoned
mushroom hunter, this walk will deepen your appreciation for nature’s quiet decomposers and mysterious organisms.

  • FMN Jim McGlone has identified these two sessions as CE opportunities for sessions of the upcoming Northern Virginia Urban Forest Roundtable on July 31. These two sessions would be 2 hours of FMN CE using ‘Virginia Urban Forest Council’ as the CE provider.

Invasive Removal Projects at Riverbend Park, June 26th

Photo: FMN Ana Ka’ahanui, Riverbend

 

Invasive Removal Projects @Riverbend Park

Thursday June 26, 2025
10:00 am – 12:00 pm

Riverbend Park
Get Directions 

8700 Potomac Hills St.
Great Falls, VA 22066

 

Sign-up information

Meet at the Riverbend Park Visitor Center
Riverbend Park needs your help! Join Fairfax County Park Authority for an invasive removal project this summer and help restore and preserve Riverbend’s natural resources. Enjoy a day outdoors and do some good!

Duties:
Sign up for an Invasive Removal Day! Make sure to wear and bring good outdoor-gear, long pants, boots, long-sleeve shirt, water, bug spray, and anything the weather may call for (hats, sunglasses, etc!) Volunteers are encouraged to bring their own work gloves. Students under 16 years old, must volunteer with a parent/guardian. The supervising adult may register and inform the Volunteer Coordinator that they are volunteering with a student.

Qualifications:
Must be able to walk on hilly natural trails and work outdoors. Interest in the stewardship of the county’s natural and cultural resources. Basic knowledge and identification skills of local plants helpful but not required. Volunteers may receive service hour credit. Contact Casey.Pittrizzi@fairfaxcounty.gov

Purpose:
Invasive plants are a threat to native wildlife and animals. These projects aim to control and reduce the spread of invasives of concern so that native wildflowers, plants, and trees have space to thrive. Healthy habitats have a positive ecological effect on native wildlife!

Benefits:
Hands-on experience in resource management and ecological restoration. Make a difference in the Potomac River ecosystem!

Thank you for your interest in volunteering with the Park Authority. In working to ensure everyone’s safety, if you are not feeling well, please stay home!

Minimum age: 16

Latino Outdoors DMV | Birding Juntos @ Neabsco Regional Park, June 28th

 

Graphic: Courtesy of Latino Outdoors DMV

Saturday, June 28, 2025
9:00 AM – 12:00 PM

Latino Outdoors activities are free and in service to their communities

REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Neabsco Regional Park,
15125 Blackburn Road,
Woodbridge, VA 22191

CLICK HERE FOR SPANISH VERSION OF THIS ANNOUNCEMENT

Join participants 9am Saturday June 28th to go bird watching and go on a nature walk in Neabsco Regional Park led by Northern Virginia Bird Alliance (NVBA) and Latino Outdoors DMV.

Beginner birders and families are welcome!

A few things to remember:

  • Don’t forget to bring comfortable clothes and shoes, sunblock, and a water bottle.

  • There will be binoculars for participants to share.

  • Snacks will be provided.

  • RSVP is required to ensure a safe and attentive leader to participant ratio.

Latino Outdoors activities are free and in service to their communities. The volunteer leaders donate time and energy to plan these experiences, paying close attention to the number of people each event can accommodate. Please honor your reservation, and if you are unable to attend an event that you signed up for, take a moment to cancel your reservation, preferably one week prior to the event, so that another community member may participate and volunteer organizers can plan accordingly. The organizers greatly appreciate it!

Any questions about the event? Contact diana.ramos@latinooutdoors.org. If you are concerned about attending an event that is publicized, please contact info@latinooutdoors.org.

From Trash to Treasure: Reconnecting with Urban Streams, July 15th

Photo: Rebecca Hale (Credit: Kristen Goodhue)

Tuesday, July 15, 2025
7:00pm -8:30pm

Sign up on Zoom to watch live or on demand

Speaker: Rebecca Hale, Smithsonian Environmental Research Center (SERC) senior scientist
We often think of cities in opposition to nature. But cities have a rich natural history, including many freshwater ecosystems. Urban streams and rivers have been used as dumps for human waste and trash and have been buried, channeled or armored to protect cities from flooding. But urban streams also provide important sources of water, spiritual values, recreation, and an opportunity to connect with nature. On July 15, urban stream ecologist Rebecca Hale will reveal how people are creating new relationships with streams and rivers that reconnect city dwellers with urban nature and each other. Part of the Smithsonian Environmental Research Center’s 60th anniversary webinar series.

This event will be hosted entirely online, and it will be recorded. Closed captions will be available at the live event and on the recording. By signing up on Zoom, you will also receive a link to the recording a few days after the live event.

 

Butterfly Identification with Larry Meade, June 18th

Photo: David Illig, Variegated Fritillary

Wednesday, June 18, 2025
7:00 PM – 8:30 PM

Virtual
FREE

Registration required

The sight of butterflies fluttering around on a warm day is one of the most iconic signs of summer. These beautiful insects usually live for only a few weeks as adults, but they make quite an impression while they are in their full glory. There is a large variety of butterfly species in our area. Larry Meade will walk   through the common species and help participants differentiate some of the trickier look-a-like species.

Participants are encouraged to register for the North American Butterfly Association (NABA) Count to be held on June 28, 8:00a AM – 1:00 PM. More info here.

A good way to prepare this program is to review Butterflies of the Mid-Atlantic, a Field Guide, by Robert Blakney and Judy Gallagher. Judy Gallagher is a member of the NVBA Board, and the field guide is available for purchase on the NVBA website.

Larry Meade is president of the Northern Virginia Bird Club and a member of the NVBA Adult Education Committee. He is a frequent bird walk leader and has been involved in numerous Audubon Christmas Bird Counts and NABA Butterfly Counts. He is the compiler of the Alexandria Circle NABA Butterfly Count in September.

Register here -This program is FREE.