Skip to main content

Certify Your Yard

Interested in certifying your yard as a wildlife habitat? Great!

The four components of a Certified Wildlife Habitat are:
Once you have these four components, you can visit the NWF's Garden for Wildlife site and pay a $20 fee to officially register your yard. Every registered yard helps us towards our neighborhood goal.

Popular posts from this blog

SPECIAL ONLINE EVENT Rusty Patched Bumblebee Identification Elaine Evans, UofM Extension/BeeLab Thursday, April 15 th  2021 7-8pm (Zoom link below) Learn how to find and identify the Minnesota State Bee (and a federally endangered species), the Rusty Patched Bumblebee (and how to distinguish them from the more common Bumblebees in Minneapolis).  This is especially helpful for anyone that has participated in the Lawns to Legumes program designed to develop a richer Bumblebee habitat, and anyone that wants to learn more about Bumble Bees! Did you know that your Minneapolis garden could be supporting an endangered species? We need your help tracking populations of the endangered rusty patched bumble bee. Learn to identify the rusty patched and other common bumble bees as well as help inform research and recovery by participating in public monitoring efforts. We will also share other actions you can take to help the rusty patched and other pollinators.   Elaine Evans is a Unive
The National Wildlife Federation officially certified the Greater Longfellow neighborhoods of Hiawatha, Howe, Longfellow, and Cooper as a Community Wildlife Habitat on August 10th, 2021.  A five year community effort involving 173 households, 5 local schools, 6 local businesses/common areas, and the Longfellow Community Council. Celebrate this achievement at the Longfellow River Gorge Festival on Sept 11th from 1-5pm.  Location:  West River Parkway between 34th and 36th st.  There will be more info about the project, canoe rides, rowing, music, children's activity area, and ice cream (while supplies last!).

Lawns to Legumes April 2020 Update

Everyone has been talking about seeing big Bumblebees flying around lately (or accidentally digging one up from the ground or leaves!).   I finally just saw one flying around a few minutes ago.   It seemed to be finding a few of the flowers that are just barely opening right now in my yard. If you see a big fat Bumblebee in April, and for the next few weeks too, you can be rest assured that is a Queen Bumblebee.   As Bumblebees do, their entire family died off in the fall, and this mated female (called a gyne) is responsible now for waking up from hibernation, getting pollen/nectar right away for strength, then looking for a place to make a nest and raise this year’s generation of Bumblebees.   Quite a responsibility! The early pollen/nectar sources in April and May actually don’t come from too many small flowering plants, but rather native trees and shrubs, such as Red Maple, Black Cherry, American Basswood, Serviceberry, Redbud, Dogwoods, Pussy Willow, Elderberry, Amer