Fun Facts – Did you know?
Visit Native Plant Sales
Native plant sales offer the largest variety of plants and guidance for making selections to maximize home displays and pollinator support. Native plants provide valuable food sources and respite sites for essential pollinators and birds throughout the summer and during migration periods. Enjoy their arrival.
See FGBT’s Plant Sale list for locations and a list of additional resources.
The Green Bay Trail is on the Map!
The Green Bay Trail has met the Homegrown National Park challenge. The Trail’s restoration showcases results achieved by implementing practices advocated by the Homegrown National Park initiative.
Homegrown National Park cofounders Doug Tallamy, author of Bringing Nature Home, and Michelle Alfandari, advocate using public and private spaces to support and expand biodiversity; “In the past, we have asked one thing of our gardens: that they be pretty. Now they have to support life, sequester carbon, feed pollinators, and manage water.”
83% of U.S. land is privately owned. Tallamy and Alfandari challenge property owners to select ecologically effective plants, shrink lawn size and remove invasives on these sites. These efforts will significantly restore the needed diversity to offset increasing climate change impacts.
*Accept the challenge. Start this fall and view the results next spring.
Get on the Map
Become a Homegrown National Park
SOSA Restoration
The Friends of the Green Bay Trails raised $100,000 to restore the Green Bay Trail south of South Avenue (SOSA) to the Glencoe Community Garden north of Harbor Street. Find out more about the SOSA Restoration.
Views from the Trail Videos
We are pleased to showcase two videos in the Gallery – “A Summer’s Day on the Trail” and “Scenes from the Trail.”
What we do
We are environmental stewards of the Green Bay Trail, restoring a natural, prairie eco-system. Our goal is to make the trail a national example of the healthy intersection of nature and culture that inspires community and individual well-being. LEARN MORE
Native Keystone Plants for Wildlife
Garden for Wildlife