Carmel Green Teen Micro-Grant Program
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      • Helping Ninjas Help Pollinators
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      • This is NOT a Plastic Bag
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      • Don'f Flip It, Save It! - Water Bottles
      • River Road Habitat Restoration
    • 2016 Projects >
      • It's in the Reusable Bag
      • Plots to Plates Gardens Tour
      • Millbrook Nature Trail
      • UHS Poultry Project
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    • 2015 Projects >
      • OPE Recycling Cubs
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      • UHS Monarch Waystation
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    • 2014 Projects >
      • Girl Scout Teaches Conservation
      • Carmel Pollinator Garden
      • Trees For Future Generations
      • CHS TEDx Conference
      • UHS Campus Green Up
    • 2013 Projects >
      • CHS Teaches Conservation
      • Bug Repellent Daisies
      • Kids Against Crayon Waste- Crayon Recycling
      • UHS Community Garden
      • A Greener College Wood
      • Do Something Trees
      • No Crayon Left Behind
      • Prairie Trace Trees
      • Goodbye Plastics
      • Carmel Green Trees
      • CHS Recycled Arts Garden
      • Going Green at the CLC
    • 2012 Projects >
      • UHS Tree Hugging Trailblazers
      • Girl Scouts Bikeyard 100
      • Bat Boxes- Nature's Bug Zappers
      • CHS Green Shower Power
    • 2011 Projects >
      • Mission Recycle
      • Reduce, Reuse, Recycle
      • Recycling at CHS
      • A Greener Tomorrow is in the Bag
      • Fishing Line Recycling
    • 2010 Projects >
      • MOSAICS Family Garden
      • Coolers are Cooler with Cups
      • Ban the Bottle, Try the Tap
      • Butterfly Reintroduction Carey Grove Park
      • Butterfly Reintroduction Clay Middle School
      • River Trail Wildflower Reintroduction
      • Tree Scouts
    • 2009 Projects >
      • Scouts' Reusable Shopping Bags
      • St. Christopher's Garden
      • Earth Day Tree Seedling Giveaway
      • CHS Green Lights Club

Carey Grove Butterfly Garden 2010

Carmel Girl Scout Troop 1166
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For their Carmel Green Teen project, members of Carmel Girl Scout troop 1166 chose to revamp a butterfly habitat reintroduction area at Carmel’s Carey Grove Park. The girls worked on the garden over a period of several weekends in May, 2010. A well-planned butterfly garden becomes a small, but representative sample of the surrounding habitat and as such provides a safe haven for butterflies and other wildlife to gather, seek shelter, acquire food and water, reproduce and build populations; do not underestimate the importance of even a small garden.

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The girl scouts weeded, edged, tilled, dug-up dead plants, planted new ones, mixed soils and mulched.

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Butterfly Gardens attract wildlife. They bring butterflies and other wildlife into the area for purposes of enjoyment, observation, study, and photography.

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The girls in Girl Scout troop 1166 worked hard to restore and renew the butterfly habitat garden.

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Carey Grove Park Butterfly Garden- BEFORE.
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Working with guidance from the Carmel-Clay Parks Department, they planted Butterfly Bushes, Snowflake Viburnums, Day Lilies, Black-Eyed Susans, Butterfly Weed, and Purple Coneflowers.

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Butterfly gardens gather the interest of humans, butterflies, and hummingbirds. The birds and insects come in search of the sweet nectar and we humans are attracted to the bright flowers.

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Second to bees, butterflies are important for pollination for our food sources. They are also a good indicator of our environmental health.

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Carey Grove Park Butterfly Garden- AFTER. Great work, Girl Scout Troop 1166!

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