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6th Annual Keweenaw Native Plant Symposium

  • Houghton, MI, 49931 United States (map)

Award-winning author Nancy Lawson will deliver the keynote address at the Sixth Annual Keweenaw Native Plant Symposium.

The symposium is free and runs from 9 a.m. to noon on Zoom. To register, visit (https://keweenaw.wildones.org/).

In addition to Lawson, two Michigan-based experts will be featured, including Stephanie Graef, who will discuss shoreline protection, and Erwin “Duke” Elsner, PhD, who will speak on the use of native plants to attract beneficial bugs to the garden.

Lawson is the author of “The Humane Gardener” and “Wildscape.” She will present “A World of Discovery: How Science and Heart Can Make You a More Ecological Gardener.” She will discuss how plants and animals perceive the world around them, the unintended consequences of noise, light and odor pollution, and how we can mitigate these disruptions and create sensory refuges in an increasingly noisy world.

Erwin “Duke” Elsner, PhD, is a Michigan State University Extension educator emeritus. He will speak on “Plant Selection to Attract and Support Predator and Parasitoid Insects.” Elsner discuss how gardeners can plant flowers to attract the predatory insects that can control garden pests.

Stephanie Graef, owner of Eagle Shoreline Protection, in Chassell, will present “Living Shoreline: Benefits to the Ecosystem.” Graef installs living shorelines: protected, stabilized coastal edges made of natural materials such as plants, sand, or rock. Unlike a seawall or other hard structure, which impedes the growth of plants and animals, living shorelines provide wildlife habitat, as well as natural resilience to communities near the waterfront.

The symposium is co-sponsored by the Keweenaw Land Trust, Keweenaw Wild Ones, the Keweenaw Garden Club and Michigan Technological University's Sustainability Demonstration House.

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Record Store Day

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Earth Day Cleanup in Houghton