ACRE (Action Chelsea for the Respect of the Environment)

Perfect for pollinators

By Trevor Greenway

Action Chelsea for the Respect of the Environment (ACRE) in partnership with the Canadian Wildlife Federation, is turning the Hundred Acre Wood in Wakefield into a year-round pollinator field to help insects thrive in the Hills. We’ve all heard about how important pollinating insects are to our lifecycle but don’t most hibernate in the winter? Why do we need to provide food for them year-round?

Hibernating pollinators need hearty spring breakfast

If you ask Canadian Wildlife Federation project coordinator and terrestrial conservation officer Maxime MacKinnon, he’ll tell you that despite the fact that bees, hoverflies and butterflies hibernate over winter, some stick around during colder months before heading south, including hummingbirds and other fowls. He says it’s important to plant winter pollinating flowers like goldenrods and wild lupins, so that when spring does come, the Hundred Acre Wood will be the site of a feast for early pollinators. 

“Some of them migrate, it depends,” says MacKinnon, who was the project lead on ACRE’s pollinator field. “And we want to provide nectarine flowers for species all year round. So they’re maybe not present, but they are here. Native wildflowers don’t bloom over the winter. We select a diverse mix of native species that bloom from spring through fall to support pollinators that hibernate and migrate throughout their active seasons.”

Elm, butternut trees not enough

ACRE president Stephen Woodley said his organization, which is a non-profit and made up of concerned citizens of the environment, planted 60 disease-resistant butternut trees as well as scores of elms last year at the Hundred ACRE Wood in Wakefield. “But it’s not enough to make it a good pollinator meadow because you have to provide food for the native pollinators throughout the year.”

Putting roofs over insects’ heads

Pollinator meadows do much more than just provide food for insects like native bees, beetles, hoverflies and butterflies – they offer “shelter, ground nesting and overwintering sites for hibernation,” explains MacKinnon. “Beyond providing nectar and pollen, native meadow habitat supports over 42 species at-risk in Western Quebec.”

Beetle, beetle, everywhere a beetle

Did you know that one in every four identified animal species is a beetle? Beetles are an extremely diverse group, with over 400,000 species known worldwide. They play many important roles in the ecosystem, from aiding with decomposition to reducing pest populations and pollinating plants.

A butterfly’s incubator

Did you know that milkweed is the only plant that a Monarch butterfly will lay its eggs on? Milkweed is considered the host plant for Monarchs. Caterpillars rely on milkweed as a food source, and they can’t develop into butterflies without this integral flower. “Since this is a migratory species, nectaring plants from spring to fall are crucial for the butterflies to feed from and [get] fuel for their travel back to Mexico,” says MacKinnon. 

Hoary and hairy: Do you know these 21 plant varieties?

ACRE, in partnership with the Canadian Wildlife Federation, planted 685 wildflower plugs at the Hundred Acre Wood including these 21 varieties: 

  • Common milkweed
  • Swamp milkweed
  • Upland white goldenrod
  • Grass-leaved goldenrod
  • Grey goldenrod
  • Lanced-leaved coreopsis
  • Tall meadow rue
  • Wild bergamot
  • Black-eyed Susan
  • Obedient plant
  • Prairie smoke
  • Foxglove beardtongue
  • Hairy beardtongue
  • Sneezeweed
  • Frost aster
  • Virginia mountain mint
  • Wild lupin
  • Closed bottle gentian
  • Frostweed
  • Hoary vervain
  • Panicled aster

Plants that love to ‘chillout”

Some native plants, like sneezeweed, need to go through a cold stratification, a process of exposing seeds to cold and moist conditions to break the seed’s dormancy and increase its ability to germinate in spring. That’s why ACRE volunteers, were planting flowers like Black-eyed Susans, goldenrods and Joe Pye weed (No, not former Wakefielder Geoffrey Pye of Yellow Jacket Avenger – but yellowjackets are pollinators, even though they are also predators.)

Olympian plants when not paddling

Chelsea Olympic paddler Sofia Jensen may have a summer full of intense competition lined up, but she still has time to volunteer for community organizations like ACRE. She, along with her father, Olaf, were among the dozen or so planters who helped turn this former farmer’s field into a pollinator meadow. 

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ACRE wants to build ‘central park’ in Chelsea

By Trevor Greenway

ACRE wants to build a “central park” in Old Chelsea. 

But to do so, it needs to raise nearly $1 million by September so it can purchase a servitude on 71 acres of greenspace behind the St. Stephen’s Parish – and they’re targeting deep-pocket donors to make it happen. 

“We’re not asking for 100 bucks,” said ACRE (Action Chelsea for the Respect of the Environment) President Stephen Woodley. “We’re asking for $2,000, $5,000, $10,000 or $25,000 bucks if we’re gonna be successful. Because you only have to do the math: You can’t get to a million with a $100 donation.”

Woodley said that his organization, which has been purchasing land across the Hills to protect in perpetuity, has been working with the church for several years on the project, but he was clear that it wasn’t ACRE who approached the church –  rather the other way around. 

“I think that the community should realize that this is really a congregation-led effort,” noted Woodley. “They’re the ones who want to put it in conservation. They can sell it for development. It’s zoned residential. They [could] get 70 houses in there before you can say ‘Jack Robinson,’ but they don’t want to, so we’re partnering with them. And really, it’s a win-win situation for us and them.”

According to ACRE, the St. Stephen’s Forest is an “intact hardwood forest” that is home to a number of species at risk, rich flora and boasts a number of hiking trails throughout. Woodley told the Low Down that the trails would be maintained and the land would eventually connect to the Larrimac ecological corridor. 

ACRE and the St. Stephen’s Parish have agreed on a $1.5 million price tag for the land, and ACRE has already raised $900,000 to date. However ACRE also has to raise a stewardship fund and pay legal fees for the sale. They have secured close to $1 million in grants and said they are hoping another $341,000 grant comes in. If it doesn’t, the organization will need just over a million dollars by September. If the grant is successful, ACRE’s fundraising goal will be around $662,000. 

“We see this as the central park for Chelsea,” said Woodley. “You see how fast Chelsea is developing? It’s a bit daunting how fast the place is developing. But ACRE is not an anti-development organization. I will repeat: We are for smart development. And smart development means you keep appropriate green space to make sure that Chelsea is an environmentally friendly community.”

Woodley said ACRE has “sector captains” who will be canvassing the Hills for donations to help purchase the land. 

Donate to ACRE’s St. Stephen’s Forest project at acre@videotron.ca or visit https://acrechelsea.qc.ca.

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