Planting for the Future

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VolkerHighways supported the planting of wildflower gardens in local schools

Project Overview

Planting in schools is a fantastic way to create invertebrate habitats and inspire the younger generation’s passion for wildlife and nature. Children learn about pollinator’s super-powers: they pollinate our crops, recycle nutrients and build fertile soils, provide medicines and sustain a planet rich in birds, flowers and fruit.

Children also learn about the challenges invertebrates are facing, including the loss of wildflower habitats, and what we can do to protect them. Wildflower, vegetable and herb gardens provide an important source of food and habitat for insects. It’s another stepping stone in the landscape for invertebrates and a valuable resource for connection, play and discovery.

Depending on the school grounds, the species planted can attract bumblebees, butterflies, honey bees, hoverflies and much more. Children receive a talk from a bug expert to spark curiosity around what species they can spot and how the school can help monitor the pollinators that enjoy the new area.

Thank you VolkerHighways for helping local schools care for and connect with local wildlife.

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Project Statistics

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3

Sesssions delivered in one school

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90

Number of children engaged

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Testimonials

"The children enjoyed throwing their seed bombs and thought carefully where to throw them. We are looking forward to watching our wildflower meadow grow in our Forest School area. - Teacher, St Mary's Island Primary School."

Planting for the Next Generation

St Mary's Island Primary School, Medway is anchored in the heart of the community. As a Church of England school, they pride themselves on an ethos of Christian values, within a caring community where relationships are important.

St Mary’s Island Primary kindly received plug plants, seeds and a booklet all about protecting pollinators courtesy of local business, Volker Highways. The school designed an entire week around pollinators for their three Reception classes. Alongside this, the Reception classes also received a talk from one of Buglife’s expert staff on invertebrates, pollinators and why they are important for us all.

All three classes took part in the booklets suggested activities and planted wildflowers and herbs in the Reception Garden’s new flower beds for pollinators. The children were shocked that over 97% of all flower-rich grasslands have been lost in England since 1930 and wanted to do their bit to help by planting wildflower and herb gardens in the Reception garden and creating a wildflower area in the Forest School. This will establish two pockets of habitat connectivity for local pollinators.

During the PE sessions the children took part in the ‘Wildflower Tag’ game where the children took it in turns to dress up as a bee. The other children had a picture of a wildflower or grass which they showed once the bee had tagged them. The first game had only 5/30 wildflowers and the number was increased each time. The bee had to run around and tag as many wildflowers and grass in 2 minutes. The children soon realised that a bee’s job is made much easier when there are more wildflowers present.

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The children watched the Bug Life video clip and found out what species of insects are pollinators. They all played the ‘Yes/No Game – Is this species a pollinator?’ Some were surprised to find out that moths and flies are pollinators too. The children chose what pollinator to make and created their own one using toilet rolls, paint, gems, glitter and pipe cleaners.

All 3 classes helped to design and create their own Pollinator Friendly Garden. The children enjoyed making these and lots of discussion was had regarding why they have chosen certain plants/habitats. Every child made a seed bomb out of clay, soil, water and seeds. At the end of the week all the children chose where to throw their seed bombs in the Forest School area. The children are looking forward to returning to the Forest School area to see if their wildflowers have grown.

Every child made a seed bomb out of clay, soil, water and seeds. At the end of the week all the children chose where to throw their seed bombs in our Forest School area. The children are looking forward to returning to our Forest School area to see if their wildflowers have grown.

The children are looking forward to watching and looking after the bug plants and seeds that they have planted and are hoping to see lots of different pollinators visit our flowering plants soon.

Wildflowers & Grasses Planted

Marjoram

Marjoram: Origanum majorana

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Marjoram: Origanum majorana

Wild marjoram, loved by bees, other pollinating insects and humans alike, can be found on chalk or limestone grassland, hedge banks, woodland rides and scrub. Often called oregano in Europe, marjoram is best known as a pizza herb, and is important in both Greek and Italian cuisine. Wild Marjoram has been traditionally used to treat colds, indigestion and stomach upsets.

Wild Thyme

Wild Thyme: Thymus Serpyllum

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Wild Thyme: Thymus Serpyllum

Wild Thyme is a low-growing herbaceous plant, belonging to the mint family, Lamiaceae. It thrives in dry, rocky soils across Europe and North America. This resilient herb's distinct fragrance and flavour make it a popular addition to gardens and kitchens. Once established, thyme is usually easy growing if in a suitably warm, sunny location. Many thymes also produce a mass of white, pink or lilac-coloured flowers over the summer.

Wild basil

Wild basil: Clinopodium vulgare

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Wild basil: Clinopodium vulgare

Wild basil adds a refreshing scent to natural environments and flavour to food. It’s a herbaceous perennial plant that is easy to grow and enjoyed by humans and pollinators. Its leafy greens make delicious pesto and salads whilst pollinators enjoy nectar from its purple-pink flowers that bloom in Summer.

Mint

Mint: Mentha

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Mint: Mentha

Mint is an easy-growing herb that thrives in well-drained, fertile soil in light shade. In fact, Mint can be invasive so it’s best planted in pots; it’s easy to grow with cuttings and can be used in teas and salads. Mint has long been valued for its ability to aid digestion, relieve nasal congestion and stimulate relaxation.

Chive

Chive: Allium schoenoprasum

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Chive: Allium schoenoprasum

Chives are relatively easy to grow and are suitable for both garden and container cultivation. They prefer well-drained soil and thrive in partial shade to full sun. Chives are delicious in food and will attract pollinators to the garden. Being from the onion family, their strong scent can repel certain garden pests, acting as a natural deterrent.

Sage

Sage: Salvia officinalis

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Sage: Salvia officinalis

Sage is a perennial herb belonging to the mint family, Lamiaceae. It’s an evergreen so you can pick the leaves all year round. They have the best strong and earthy flavour before the flowers appear and are best picked late in the morning or early evening when the aromatic oils are concentrated in the leaves.

Fennel

Fennel: Foeniculum vulgare

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Fennel: Foeniculum vulgare

Fennel is rich in Vitamin C, potassium and fibre and is a member of the carrot family. It is a highly aromatic herb with feathery leaves and yellow flowers. Both the bulb and the feathery leaves are commonly used in cooking.

Lavender

Lavender: Lavandula

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Lavender: Lavandula

Lavender is renowned for its fragrant flowers, which are typically shades of purple, blue, or pink. The essential oils in the flowers give lavender its distinctive and relaxing scent and is often used to aid restful sleep. Lots of bees love lavender during the Spring and Summer months, particularly the bumble bee as it has a long tongue, better adapted to the tubular shaped flowers.

Rosemary

Rosemary: Salvia rosmarinus

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Rosemary: Salvia rosmarinus

Rosemary is known for its fragrant, needle-like leaves. The leaves contain essential oils that give the plant its distinctive scent, which is often described as a mix of pine and citrus.Rosemary requires little maintenance during the year except cutting back after flowering to prevent plants becoming straggly and woody.

Oregano

Oregano: Origanum vulgare

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Oregano: Origanum vulgare

Oregano plants are low maintenance and can be grown in garden beds, containers, or even as a decorative and aromatic ground cover. Often used in Mediterranean cooking, Oregano has an earthy and slightly bitter flavour. Easy-grow plants like oregano are a great way to introduce children to gardening.

Scabious Stamp

Scabious: Scabiosa

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Scabious: Scabiosa

These vibrant bluish-purple flowers are related to the honeysuckle, rich in nectar and attractive to insects, especially bees. They are also known as “pincushion flowers” because they have short petals with little stamens sticking out of them. This flower gets its name from the Latin word for itch, because it was once believed to be a remedy for the skin disease scabies.

Over time, this meadow should be home to a rich variety of wildlife which could include…

Buff-tailed bumblebee: Bombus terrestris

Buff-tailed bumblebee

These are the giants of the bumblebee world, and the whole species is named after the buff colour of their queen’s tail. They can be found in the UK’s lowlands, nesting underground in very large groups. These insects are very fond of nectar, and if they can’t easily reach it with their tongues, they will bite a hole in the flower to suck it out.

Common Carder Bee: Bombus Pascuorum

Common Carder Bee

This relatively small ginger-coloured bumblebee is widespread throughout the UK, in habitats including farms, woods and gardens. Carder bees have very long tongues and feed on heather, clover and lavender. They often nest in old mouse runs and disused birds’ nests.

Red-tailed Bumblebee: Bombus Lapidarius

Red-tailed Bumblebee

This is an abundant species of bumblebee that is found all over the UK. This social bee nests in disused burrows, under stones or at the base of old dry stone walls. Both males and females have the eponymous red tails as well as velvety black bodies and transparent wings.

Shrill Carder Bee: Bombus Sylvarum

Shrill Carder Bee Stamp

The shrill carder bee is one one of the rarest bumblebees in the UK, and is only found in a handful of locations, including the Newport Wetlands in South Wales. This bee has a distinctly high-pitched buzz, which is why it got the moniker “shrill”. Carder bees have very long tongues which they stick into flowers so that they can suck nectar.

Brown-banded Carder Bee: Bombus Humilis

Brown-banded Carder Bee Stamp

The brown-banded carder bee is a bumblebee that favours heaths and dry, open grasslands. It has a chestnut-coloured thorax and strawberry-blond abdomen, but there are a few black hairs at the base of its wings. Populations have declined because of habitat loss, but this bee can be found in clusters in north Cornwall and Newport in South Wales, for example.

Honeybee: Apis Mellifera

Honeybee

Honeybees have six legs, four wings and five eyes. They use the Sun, and possibly the Earth’s magnetic fields, to navigate, and they can fly at speeds of up to 20mph when in search of food. At the height of summer there are around 40,000 honeybees in each hive, and that number drops to around 5,000 in the winter.

Tawny Mining Bee: Andrena Fulva

Tawny Mining Bee

These furry, ginger bees are commonly found in parks and gardens across southern Britain during April and May. They feed from a wide variety of plants including dandelions, buttercups, willows and fruit trees. Tawny mining bees often make their nests in lawns and flowerbeds or in orchards where they can be close to apple, pear and cherry blossom for example.

Red Mason: Osmia Rufa

Red Mason

Also known as the red mason bee, this insect can be found in cities, towns and villages across Britain and Europe. Females make their homes and lay their eggs in wall cavities, under roof tiles and even inside keyholes, lining their nests with mud. These bees are excellent pollinators, particularly of apple trees.

Large Scabious Bee: Andrena Hattofiana

Large Scabious Bee Stamp

This solitary bee can be found in small numbers across Europe, and it is now considered an endangered species. As the name suggests, this bee needs scabious flowers to thrive, and as scabious-rich habitats have declined, so bee numbers have followed. Small populations have been found in Cornwall, notably in the rough of golf courses, where scabious flowers can thrive, attracting the bees.

Marmalade Hoverfly: Episyrphus Balteatus

Marmalade Hoverfly

The marmalade hoverfly is so-called because it is orange with black stripes that are thin or “thick cut” just like the popular preserve! It is Britain’s most common hoverfly and can be seen in parks, gardens, hedgerows and woods. They are present all year round, but numbers are often much higher in the summer when marmalade hoverflies migrate to the UK from abroad.

Drone Fly: Eristalis Tenax

Drone Fly

This insect’s patchy brown and orange body makes it look a lot like the male honeybee, which is a very effective way to keep it safe from predators. Drone flies also copy honeybee flight patterns as they move around in search of nectar. Their larvae, nicknamed “rat-tailed maggots”, feed on rotting organic material in stagnant water.

Pellucid Hoverfly: Volucella Pellucens

Pellucid Hoverfly

This large black fly has a white stripe on its body and black spots on its transparent wings. It can be found throughout most of Britain and Ireland, and is often seen feasting on bramble flowers in hedgerows or on the edge of woodland. The larvae develop in wasp nests where they feed on detritus wasp grubs.

Large Narcissus Fly: Merodon Equestris

Large Narcissus Fly

This medium-sized hoverfly looks very much like a bumblebee, which provides great protection against predators. This insect loves warm, sunny spots full of flowers, like gardens in the summer. Females lay their eggs on the leaves of bulbous plants such as bluebells and daffodils, and the larvae then burrow into the bulbs, feeding on them and causing some damage.

Soldier Beetle: Cantharis Rustica

Soldier Beetle

The soldier beetle makes its home in open woodland or anywhere where there is tall grass. These carnivorous predators are common throughout England and Wales, where they can be seen from May to July. The adults prefer to hunt for food on flowers, while their larvae live on the ground, feeding on a range of other creatures.

7-spot Ladybird: Coccinella Septempunctata

7-spot Ladybird

These ladybirds are easy to identify because, just as you might expect, they have a pattern of seven black spots on their red wing cases. They are our most common ladybirds, found in parks and gardens throughout the UK. Ladybirds use their bright colours to warn predators that they won’t taste good, but it doesn’t always work!

Rose Chafer: Cetonia Aurata

Rose Chafer

These beetles have distinctive green and purple-bronze iridescent bodies, making them easy to identify. They love crawling on flowers on sunny days, when they shimmer in the light and look even more striking. Their favourite source of food, as the name indicates, is the rose, and the dog rose in particular.

Flower Beetle: Oedeomera Nobilis

Flower Beetle

This beetle is so-called because the male of the species has large green bulges on its hind thighs, whereas the female does not. It used to be quite rare, but is now a very abundant species throughout the UK. You should be able to spot the adults without too much difficulty, as they like to feed on open flowers like daisies

Peacock Butterfly: Inachis Io

Peacock Butterfly

This common British butterfly gets its name from the large spots on its wings, which are reminiscent of peacock feathers. These markings help to scare off predators in the woods, gardens and parks where they live. They hibernate in winter, folding up their wings to show the dull undersides so that they can blend in with their surroundings while they sleep.

6-spot Burnet: Zygaena Filipendulae

6-spot Burnet

You are most likely to spot this medium-sized moth flying around in the daytime between June and August. It has six red spots on each of its glossy black forewings. If attacked, the burnet moth will release cyanide, so the spots serve as a warning to predators that this species is poisonous.

Red Admiral: Vanessa Atalanta

Red Admiral

These large red, white and black butterflies have very powerful wings. Most of the magnificent red admirals that we see in the UK start off in North Africa and migrate north, arriving here from late March onwards and staying until autumn. Male red admirals court their females for several hours before they begin mating.

Holly Blue: Celastrina Argiolus

Holly Blue

This stunning, vibrant, blue butterfly can be seen across most of the UK, but is most common in England and Wales. Caterpillars feed on holly and ivy buds, digging into them and eating what is inside. Holly blues are very popular in Finland, where they have been elevated to the status of national butterfly!

Small Tortoiseshell Butterfly: Aglais Urticae

Small Tortoiseshell Butterfly

The small tortoiseshell is one of the UK’s most common and beloved butterfly species. Females lay their eggs on stinging nettles, before caterpillars hatch around ten days later. When courting, the males beat their antennae on the females’ hindwings.

Common Wasp: Vespula Vulgaris

Common Wasp

Anyone who has ever tried to have a summer picnic will be familiar with this yellow and black striped insect which can be found all over the UK. Queens first come out of hibernation at the very start of spring and start to look for suitable nesting sites in a range of habitats. Wasps will try to eat anything sweet, and although we might think of them as pests, they are useful pollinators.

Ruby-tailed Wasp: Chrysis Ignita

Ruby-tailed Wasp

Ruby-tailed wasps are often called “cuckoo wasps” because they lay their eggs in other insects’ nests. Shiny and turquoise with a rich red abdomen, they are strikingly beautiful in appearance. Ruby-tailed wasps have a sting, but don’t tend to use it.

Mason Wasp: Ancistrocerus Parietum

Mason Wasp

This wasp is native to Europe and North America and gets its name because it likes to build its nests in walls. Mason wasps have black bodies with yellow stripes and narrow waists. Female mason wasps are slightly larger than males, and can control the gender of their offspring.

Red Wasp: Vespula Rufa

Red Wasp

This wasp is so-called because it has reddish-brown markings on its body. Red wasps make their nests in tree stumps, using leaf litter and soil. Badgers often destroy the nests, eating them along with the wasps, as their thick hair and skin protects them from being stung.

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