Two of the nearly 80 workshops scheduled for the upcoming Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association (OEFFA) annual conference will help you help bees and their friends.
pollinators
Reasons to protect pollinators
Learn about the importance of pollinators and about threats to them in a workshop at the Mahoning County office of OSU Extension, CFAES’s outreach arm. It’s tomorrow, Tuesday, Oct. 23, from 4:30-6:30 p.m. Registration is $10. Find out more. (Photo: Getty Images.)
Home improvement for pollinators
The next Pollinator School workshop, presented by the Mahoning County office of CFAES’s outreach arm, OSU Extension, runs from 4:30-6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 16, in Canfield in northeast Ohio. The program’s title is “Habitats.” It’s about seeing, understanding and improving where pollinators live and feed. Registration is $10. Learn more. (Photo: Getty Images.)
A look at a bee we should see
The 2018 webinar series hosted by CFAES’s Bee Lab wraps up at 9 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 17, with “The Ohio Bee Survey: In Search of the Rusty Patched Bumble Bee” by Randy Mitchell of the University of Akron.
In early 2017, the rusty patched bumble bee, shown here, after suffering significant population declines, became the first bee placed on the endangered species list in the continental United States.
Find details. Watching the webinar is free; use the “Guest Login” at 8:55 a.m. (Photo: USGS Bee Inventory and Monitoring Lab, Beltsville, Maryland (public domain), via Wikimedia Commons.)
Enjoy fall, see pollinators today at 2 pm
CFAES’s Secrest Arboretum hosts a Guided Autumn and Pollinator Walk from 2-3:30 p.m. today, Tuesday, Sept. 25, starting at its Seaman Orientation Plaza.
The arboretum is at the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, 1680 Madison Ave., part of CFAES’s Wooster campus. Free admission; dress for the weather (a chance of showers).
Find out more. (Photo: Common buckeye butterfly on goldenrod, Getty Images.)
Making homes for pollinators
Pollinators — butterflies, bees and others — are key to farming, gardening and healthy diets. But globally, unfortunately, their populations are declining. Learn and see ways to help them, especially by growing the plants they need, in an expert talk called “Pollinator Habitat” in the Gwynne Conservation Area at Farm Science Review. It’s set for noon to 12:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 20.
See the full Gwynne schedule. The Review overall runs from Sept. 18-20. (Photo: Monarch butterfly, Getty Images.)
Webinar on bees ’n’ beans
Kelly Tilmon, associate professor in CFAES’s Department of Entomology, presents “Pollinator Diversity in Ohio Soybeans” at 9 a.m. Wednesday, Sept. 19, in a webinar series hosted by CFAES’s Bee Lab.
Gather further details. It’s free to watch; use the “Guest Login” at 8:55 a.m. (Photo: Getty Images.)
Ways to bee kind
CFAES scientist Elizabeth Long presents “Protecting Pollinators from Pesticides” at 9 a.m. Aug. 15 in a webinar series hosted by CFAES’s Bee Lab. Find more details. It’s free to watch; use the “Guest Login” at 8:55 a.m. A 2016 article in the Christian Science Monitor reported on some of her research. (Photo: Honey bee, Getty Images.)
Seeing what needs to be done
Pumpkin and squash pollination has officially begun w/ the arrival of the Squash bees. 7 in this blossom alone! #glveg #cfaes pic.twitter.com/bmJJ91ZEvt
— JJski (@OSU_IPM) July 3, 2018
Register soon for bee lecture, book signing
A reminder that bee expert Olivia Carril, co-author of The Bees in Your Backyard: A Field Guide to North America’s Bees (Princeton University Press, 2015), is giving a lecture and book signing at 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 6, at the University of Mount Union’s Hoover-Price Campus Center, 420 West Simpson St., Alliance. Admission is free, but you have to register online by Monday, June 4.
Carril is giving “Bees in Your Backyard” workshops at three locations in Ohio the same week, co-hosted by CFAES’s Bee Lab. Unfortunately, registration for the workshops has ended. (Image: Princeton University Press.)