Greenhouse Canada

News
Five easy ways to promote pollinator plants

February 25, 2016  By Dave Harrison


February 25, 2016 – The National Pollinator Garden Network in the U.S. is gearing up for a big push to promote the Million Pollinator Garden Challenge that encourages Americans to plant and register one million pollinator gardens by the end of 2016.

From window boxes to expansive landscapes, every garden that is planted with pollinators in mind gives honeybees, butterflies, bumblebees and others a chance to survive and thrive.
 

With the gardening season right around the corner, now is the time for garden centres and nurseries to plan how they can spread the message about the importance and benefits of pollinator-friendly plants.

Greenscape Gardens in St. Louis, Missouri, is one garden retailer that has met with success in communicating with their customers about planting with pollinators in mind. With more than three growing seasons of experience advocating for pollinators under their belts, Greenscape’s Jen Schamber and Tammy Behm shared five ways garden retailers can grow customer awareness and take action for pollinators’ benefit.

Advertisement

#1: Look at existing programs in your area. Greenscape Gardens turned to the Grow Native! This is a native plant marketing and education program of the Missouri Prairie Foundation. This program is launching its Pollinator Buffet line of 11 plants chosen for their benefits to pollinators. Its colourful tags help educate consumers on both the plant and the pollinators it benefits. With an existing program, the work of researching plants and providing consumer educational information has already been done.

#2: Ask your grower network to put pollinator-friendly plants into production. Consumers are driving the demand for pollinator garden plants of all sorts — annuals, perennials, shrubs, trees and vines. Communication is key. Growers have a huge opportunity to listen to what consumers and retailers are demanding and to provide it.

#3: Relate pollinators to vegetable and berry gardening. “Edibles” gardening is more popular than ever, but many gardeners don’t equate a bountiful harvest with robust pollinator activity. Use point-of-purchase signage, customer communications and staff interactions to educate gardeners on the importance of including pollinator-friendly plants along with veggies and berries. Cross-merchandise pollinator plants with the edibles to drive the point home.

#4: Team with community partners. Find a community, state or regional organization with the same mission and collaborate. Pairing with the local wildlife or native plant society, for instance, creates two outlets through which to tell the pollinator story and spread the message beyond the retailer’s established customer base. A good place to look for a community partner is within the National Pollinator Garden Network, whose member organizations often have local chapters. Also look to local libraries and youth programs for a partnership opportunity to spread the message to children.

#5: Spend a little, get a lot in return. Greenscape Gardens spreads the word about pollinator plants by giving away a free sample plant with any purchase. “It raises your authenticity in telling the pollinator story,” Schamber says. “In this consumer market we have to give a little bit to gain the consumers’ trust.” Demonstrating that your company is “walking the walk” also gives community partners assurance of your commitment to the cause — and will give them even more reason to share your story.

THE POLLINATOR CHALLENGE

With less than a year to go, the Million Pollinator Garden Challenge will hit its mark with the help of garden centres and nurseries who are communicating and engaging with customers, sharing the pollinators’ stories, and initiating action.

The Challenge was established by the National Pollinator Garden Network, led by national gardening and habitat organizations American Public Gardens Association, National Gardening Association, National Wildlife Federation and Pollinator Partnership joined with industry organizations AmericanHort, American Seed Trade Association, Home Garden Seed Association and the National Garden Bureau.
 

Learn more about Greenscape Garden’s techniques for telling the pollinator story in the AmericanHort webinar, “Bee Savvy: The Business Opportunities Behind Pollinator Awareness.”


Print this page

Advertisement

Stories continue below


Related