El Oso Grande Pollinator Habitat


 

        

 

    

Many thanks to our local neighborhood volunteer, Karen Rivard, for her dedicated and ongoing work on the Pollinator Habitat. 

Visitors of all kinds express thanks and appreciation for this peaceful and natural place to walk.  Neighborhood volunteers are doing a great job of maintaining plant ID signs and keeping the paths neat and free of weeds. The pollinator habitat was originally planned with an emphasis on perennial shrubs and small trees.
 
Now we need to increase the beauty and benefits to pollinators and birds by adding flowering plants, including annuals. Upgrades to certain areas will consist of thinly seeded native grasses and flowering annuals and perennials such as Gaillardia, prairie sunflower,verbenas, evening primrose, blue flax, and penstemons.   Some of these will be seeded in late fall because they germinate better after a winter in the ground.   A light seeding with grasses will also be tried along the edges of the stream bed to protect against erosion.    More Agaves will be planted in open areas.
 
Karen Rivard, OGNA
 

El Oso Grande Pollinator Habitat 

I have been a fan of the Oso Grande Pollinator Habitat always, but inheriting the watering tech job was a new challenge. I remember the joyous kick-off day way back when the original volunteers put in numerous potted plants. Unfortunately, no one kept track of which plants were on which of the four separate irrigation lines. Although most of the shrubs we put in have grown, many of the original smaller plants have been lost — a few possibly “poached” by would-be gardeners, and some chewed by rabbits. The latter sometimes come back stronger.

Most losses came from lack of water during drought times. So sorting out which plants were affected by leaks in a particular line, and ferreting out all the clogged emitters (drippers) was a time-consuming chore in early summer. A big triumph was locating and repairing an underground gusher that my predecessor was unable to fix. It grew even worse after he departed. Happily, I can say now that everything is working like it should and a half-dozen new plants are doing well. More will appear as temperatures moderate and it is safe again to plant.

The habitat has proven to be a refuge for all kinds of wild bees, butterflies, birds and lots of blue tail and other lizards. Even a few honeybees show up. Surprising new plants are volunteering, perhaps from the old seed bank in the soil or a seed dropped by a bird or a dog’s feet. The flowers change during the day, with the plentiful “doze daisies” opening from their snooze around midday and the yellow blazing star opening toward evening. Some show only after a rain, like the blue-flowered “purple sage.”

This place is also a refuge for human beings who need to get out, away from their homes for a little while and experience something different and peaceful. They enjoy reading the new, neater signs identifying the different plants. Things will only improve as time goes on. Meanwhile, I have some suggestions for visitors. Please stay on the paths for safety sake — there are prickly things and tripping hazards out there. If you bring a dog, please leash and pick up after him. And don’t discard fruit or other people foods to support critters. As well-meaning as it might be, the critters don’t seem to relish it and it lingers looking out of place. Let’s thank our friends and neighbors for rejuvenating the paths, improving the signage and the other good deeds they so enthusiastically contribute.

 Tom Stewart, President of the Albuquerque Native Plant Society

For more information see the 2024 Native Plant Society Spring Newsletter:    https://www.npsnm.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/ABQ-Spring-2024.pdf