National Public Lands Day Volunteer Opportunity at Marine Corps Base Quantico, September 27th
Photo: by Mike Fox, Monarch on milkweed
Stafford , VA 22554
United States
Registration and sign-up details: Check out: https://www.neefusa.org/npld/
Habitat Installation — September 27, 2025 — Join us for one or both sessions
Be part of something big! Installing two new 1,200 ft² pollinator meadows:
- Mainside Pollinator Garden (Expansion), 9am-12pm
Near family housing and in collaboration with the Quantico Spouses’ Garden Club, this site is part of a long-term vision to convert 2–3 acres of invasive-dominated hillside into vibrant, native habitat for butterflies, bees, and more. - Westside Meadow Plot, 1-4pm
Right next to Quantico’s Natural Resources offices and game check station, this highly visible site will replace a monoculture lawn with a beautiful native wildscape, fully accessible to the public!
At both locations, volunteers will:
Clear brush
Till the soil
Plant native milkweed (Common and Butterfly Weed)
Add a colorful mix of supporting wildflowers.
Seeds will come from both purchased stock and on-base collections from last year’s NPLD.
Infrastructure Support — September 27, 2025, 9am-12pm
Volunteers are building more than just gardens—they are building community infrastructure. Volunteers will help construct a tool storage shed with a built-in rainwater catchment system at the Main side Pollinator Garden. Right now, there’s no water access or on-site storage, adding over 30 minutes of transport time to every volunteer session. Your help here will:
Reduce future volunteer workload
Model water conservation
Ensure the garden thrives long-term
Seed Collection & Propagation — Fall 2025 through Spring 2026
Want to keep the momentum going? After NPLD, volunteers will collect milkweed seeds from 12 known wild patches across MCB Quantico (September 28–October 4). Then in March 2026, volunteers will then stratify and start growing them indoors for spring planting.
This hands-on work ensures future plantings succeed—and that volunteers don’t have to rely solely on purchased seed. It’s a huge step toward sustainability and ecological resilience.
Whether you’re planting flowers, swinging a hammer, or collecting seeds—there’s a role for everyone. Come make a lasting difference for pollinators, the environment, and the Quantico community!


