Outdoor Learning: RIWPS Education Grant

A few years ago Charlestown Elementary School chose Outdoor Learning as a focus. The site was to include a short existing trail that ran through the woods, a large sand area and the parking lot.

Winter Book Discussion: The Brothers Gardeners

During the afternoon of February 9,  eleven RIWPS members gathered in the comfortable living room of the Pilson house around a roaring fire. As if on cue a few snow flakes fluttered past the windows. Elaine Trench lead the discussion of “The Brother Gardeners” by Andrea Wulf.

Keep Our Native Plants Humming – Video Recording and Plant List

What you can do to support native bee pollinators in your landscape. Video recording of the October 2019 Lisa Loftland Gould Lecture by Dr. Gegear. Native Plant list by bee tongue length.

Peter Del Tredici

Peter has written:

“While most people have a negative view of spontaneous urban plants, they are actually performing many of the same ecological functions that native species perform in nonurban areas. ..absorbing excess nutrients that accumulate in wetlands; reducing heat buildup in heavily paved areas; controlling erosion along rivers and streams; mitigating soil, water, and air pollution; providing food and habitat for wildlife; and converting the carbon dioxide produced by the burning of fossil fuels into biomass.

The typical urban plant is well adapted to soils that are relatively fertile, dry, unshaded, and alkaline. Through a twist of evolutionary fate, many of these species have evolved life-history traits in their native habitats that are ‘pre-adapted’ them to flourish in cities.

 Marble or brick buildings, for example, are analogous to naturally occurring limestone cliffs. Similarly, the increased use of deicing salts along walkways and highways has resulted in the development of high-pH microhabitats that are often colonized by either grassland species adapted to limestone soils or salt-loving plants from coastal habitats. Finally, the hotter, drier conditions one finds in cities favor species that come from exposed, sunny habitats in nature.

Preadaptation is a useful idea for understanding the emergent ecology of cities because it helps to explain that some plants and not others grow on piles of construction rubble, chain-link fence lines, highway median strips, pavement cracks, and compacted turf.

While most biologists view invasive plants as a serious biological problem, the fact remains that their initial introduction and distribution were usually the result of deliberate decisions that reflected the economic, ornamental, or conservation values of the day. Between the 1930s and the 1960s, various federal, state, and local agencies encouraged— and often subsidized— the cultivation of plants such as kudzu, multiflora rose, and autumn olive for erosion control and wildlife habitat purposes. It should come as no surprise that they became major problems forty years later, after millions of them had been planted. Indeed, the spread of nonnative species across the landscape is as much a cultural as a biological phenomenon, a fact often overlooked by advocates of strict ecological restoration.”

Michael Dirr speaking in Newport on April 25

Michael Dirr, highly acknowledged expert on woody plants, will be delivering the keynote lecture, In Praise of Noble Trees, for Newport Arboretum Week.  In addition to his widely known reference texts, Manual of Woody Landscapes Plants: Their Identification, Ornamental Characteristics, Culture and Propagation and Uses, Dirr’s Hardy Trees and Shrubs – An Illustrated Encyclopedia, Dirr’s Trees and Shrubs for Warm Climates: An Illustrated EncyclopediaDirr is credited with over 300 scientific and popular publications.  The lecture will begin at 6 PM at the Jane Pickens Theatre in Newport Rhode Island.  It will be followed by book signing and reception at The Colony House

Tickets are $30.00 per person; $15.00 for students at the door.

More info about Newport Arboretum week including the lecture.

Awards, Awards, Awards

The RIWPS March 25  Annual meeting was a time for awards.

Annual Volunteer awards were given to Linda McDaniel and Pat Cahalan.  Linda was recognised with the Volunteer of the Year Award for her work as co-chair of the 2016 Plant Sales Committee and her work in Seed Starters East.  RIWPS is delighted that she is heading the 2017 Plant Sale Committee!  Pat received the Lifetime Service Award for the contributions to WildFloraRI, Seed Starters West, Plant Sales and a variety of other tasks.

Congratulations and thank you to Linda and Pat for your dedication to RIWPS’ mission and for making the experience of other volunteers so wonderful. (See previous award winners)


Hilary A. Downes-Fortune, a teacher at the Compass school in Kingston was awarded the $1,000 to install a pollinator garden and learning landscape at the  school.  The funds will be used to purchase a variety of locally grown native plant species for this garden.  The garden will be a part of the South County Pollinator Conservation Project, a collaborative effort of the Rhody Native Project (RI Natural History Survey), RI Wild Plant Society, New England Wildflower Society, and Ragged Orchid Farm in Wakefield. The goal of the SCPCP is to serve as a new Citizen Science effort to begin the documentation, monitoring, and research on Rhode Island’s plant/pollinator communities.

An easily- applied survey technique using a basic digital point-and-shoot camera will allow students to conduct periodic surveys by photographing insect visitors. Each photo becomes an instant record of the insect, the plant being visited, and the date. A database of all photos will document plant phenology (flowering period) and insect visitation that will be an invaluable tool in assessing the region’s pollinator fauna, as well as identifying the best plants to use in pollinator conservation efforts.

The pollinator garden will also include an Audio Bee Cabinet, based a design of Sarah Peebles, an artist/ecologist in Toronto, Canada. The Cabinet is an observable nesting sites for wild, solitary bees and wasps. Students can watch and listen to discover how bees vary in size, shape and color, and how their habitats and life cycles differ.

RIWPS 2016 Annual Volunteer Awards

Volunteer of the Year is awarded to Helen Drew for her work at Seed Starters West and the Early Native Plant Sale. The Lifetime Service Award is given to Doug McGrady for his dedication to seeking and identify rare plants and plant communities in RI and sharing his passion and knowledge as a RIWPS walk leader.  Rhode Island’s native plant populations and the RIWPS community are better because of them.  Awardees from past years.

native plant sales

Beauty + more | native plants sustain local wildlife

Plant Sale Press Release – for immediate release
RI Wild Plant Society’s: “Best Native Plant Sale in Rhode Island”
June 6, 2015 | 9AM -1PM, rain or shine
@URI’s East Farm | Rt. 108, Kingston, RI

Are you a bird-lover? Do you delight in seeing butterflies? Are you committed to supporting pollinators?

Co-evolving over millennia, our local wildlife has formed complex and specialized relationships with our native plants. To support them we must plant the native species on which they depend. Some of those available at the sale include:

For Birds: serviceberry (Amelanchier spp.), spicebush (Lindera benzoin), high + lowbush blueberry (Vaccinium spp.), winterberry (Ilex verticillata), trumpet honeysuckle (Lonicera sempervirens), and eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginiana)

For Pollinators: sundial lupine (Lupinus perennis), cardinal flower (Lobelia cardinalis), blazing star (Liatris novae-angliae), American-aster (Symphyotrichum spp.), Joe-Pye weed (Eutrochium spp.), and mountain-mint (Pycnanthemum spp.)

Butterfly larval hosts: bird-foot violet (Viola pedata), white turtlehead (Chelone glabra), blue iris (Iris spp.), yellow wild indigo (Baptisia tinctoria), blue vervain (Verbena hastata), and milkweed (Asclepias spp.)

 Interested in learning more about which RI native plants are suitable for your landscape?

Join us June 6 with your questions, your cart/wagon, + plenty of trunk-space.

 Offering 100+ species of native trees, shrubs, wildflowers, ferns, and much more

 * All profits directly support the work of Rhode Island Wild Plant Society