Since people are reading this, let me rant a bit:

One of the things you can do, as an individual, to help your local environment, is grow flowers. Even if you live in an apartment, just a flower pot on a windowsill helps - even tiny urban gardens have an outside impact on pollinators.

If you have a yard, you can replace invasive grasses with native species and nectar-rich flowers. Don’t use herbicides or pesticides. Leave leaf litter alone over the winter to provide habitat for insects. Set aside a section to “go wild”. Just like with flower pots, leaving even a small section of lawn without chemicals and frequent mowing can have an outsized impact on pollinators and native insects.

Lawns and gardens are a space where individual effort and individual care for the environment really does matter. You might not be able to reverse climate change, but you can make a migratory monarch butterfly’s day just a little better.

And tell people! Tell people how you are gardening and how you’re managing your lawn, and why. Because the most important thing you can do for the climate is talk about it.

  • tektite@slrpnk.net
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    21
    ·
    2 months ago

    Mine is the only front yard on my street that isn’t just grass and weeds since I ripped out my lawn. I was out hand weeding one day when the only neighbor without weeds in his lawn came over to patronize me (not the first time) about how he just uses roundup and doesn’t have to worry about the weeds!

    A few weeks later I saw his yard crew show up while he was at work… he’s not even applying the roundup himself.