SAUK RAPIDS HERALD & BENTON COUNTY NEWS | TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 2020 | HOME AND GARDEN GUIDE | Page 1B
Home &
Garden GUIDE|2020
Butterfly, bee buffet Pollinator gardens feed the world BY NATASHA BARBER STAFF WRITER
ST. CLOUD – A blooming garden that lasts from early spring to late fall may lend itself as a mental vacation for some, but the ecosystem within is more than meets the eye. Gardens are shelters, food sources and homes to nature’s
smallest residents. Protecting pollinators has become an ongoing trend across the world and rightly so. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, three-fourths of the world’s flowering plants and about 35% of the world’s food crops depend on pollinators to reproduce. Pollinators include bees, butterflies and flower flies. “Without them we wouldn’t have any food,” Bobby Jensen said. Jensen, co-host of Grow
with KARE of KARE 11 news, has been in the horticulture industry since 1976. He hosted two sessions of “Pollinator Gardening: Who, What, Where, When” at the Central Minnesota Builders Association Home & Lifestyle Show March 15 at the River’s Edge Convention Center in St. Cloud. One way people can help protect pollinators is by planting pollinator gardens. Jensen said native plantings can be beneficial to both property owners and pollinators alike. He said native plants produce
more nectar t h a n hybrids, and native plants and insects have coinhabited for ages. For homeowners, native species are simple: no special soil, no fertilizer and minimal watering once plants are established. “I’m the laziest gardener you’ve ever met,” Jensen said.
Pollinators page 2B
Inside:
Pollinator gardening page 1B,2B,4B Helmbrecht page 3B First time home buying page 5B-6B Building permits page 7B