It sure is wonderful and also fortunate to have found with Lorraine Johnson and Sheila Colla's 2023 botany, gardening and strongly conservation themed A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition a book that is specifically focussed on where I live, that provides specific, scientifically sound and useful botanical, ecological and conservation details on how to make, how to create gardens (both large and small) as well as more meadow like un-manicured lawns to attract, to provide shelter and sustenance for native, for endemic to Ontario and the Great Lakes region pollinating insects (for wasps, bees and the like), and using ONLY non invasive, only native to the Great Lakes region plants species to accomplish this (and why this is so essential for biodiversity, for conservation, for protecting native and often very beneficial for plant pollination insect species as well as the plants on which these species rely and depend, and vice versa of course).
For sadly, ALL other similar books I had found on this topic, they were either rather pan North-American in scope (and thus much too general for me) or were in fact meant for British Columbia and Western Canada and thus bien sûr not for the Great Lakes region (so that indeed, finding A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition at my local independent Dundas, Ontario bookstore last Thursday and discovering that Lorraine Johnson is a Hamilton, Ontario based author and Sheila Colla a York University, a Toronto professor and conservation scientist, this all really very much and delightfully tickled my reading fancy).
And yes, I have definitely and majorly enjoyed A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition. For Lorraine Johnson and Sheila Colla's textual information in A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition on the importance of promoting native plants and native pollinating insects is delightfully informative, necessarily enlightening, sensibly shown, but also environmentally speaking often rather saddening, somewhat frustrating, showing, demonstrating that many pollinators and plants endemic to the Great Lakes region are endangered (sometimes even almost extinct), not all that popular in urban gardens and sometimes infuriatingly also not even allowed and expressly forbidden by silly and ridiculous by-laws, that greenhouses and nurseries using non native to the Great Lakes region bumblebees, as well as keeping European honeybees in one's backyard or on one's farm do not in fact really help mitigate conservational issues and may even be causing some environmental damage (are mostly not all that beneficial to and for endemic insect pollinators), and that the how-to gardening suggestions, the extensive section on native Ontario plants to consider for a natural and endemic pollinator friendly garden or lawn are interesting and educational, with lots of botanical and ecological information to be found in A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition and a nice accompaniment to Johnson and Colla's text by an aesthetically pleasant combination of photographs and Ann Sanderson's illustrations (and with me certainly not knowing that native Ontario bee species are mostly non communal but solitary, do not produce honey and are much better suited to and for endemic Southern Ontario plant life than invasive insect species and that many ornamental non native plants are actually sterile hybrids which of course would thus not even produce any pollen and are as such pretty well useless for and to insects, simply take up space and provide no food and no environmental and ecological benefits whatsoever).
Five stars in general for A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition, and with my only textual complaints regarding what Lorraine Johnson and Sheila Colla have written being that I definitely would want a bit more in-depth criticism and open condemnation in A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition of the fact that creating natural and non-manicured insect and wildlife friendly gardens and lawns in urban and even in suburban areas of Ontario is far too often made very difficult and sometimes even nigh impossible by outdated regulations requiring tidy gardens and meticulously mown short grass lawns (as well as by numerous mandates against native plants that are erroneously considered to be noxious weeds even though they are important food sources for beneficial insect species) and that even though there is supposedly a ban in Ontario against the cosmetic and random use of pesticides, there are (in my opinion) so very many exemptions and a total lack of enforcement of these rules (and with Roundup and other pesticides also being very readily and easily available for purchasing), that well, we might as well not have a pesticide ban in Ontario at all. So frankly, so truth be told, considering how pro conservation and pro creating natural and pesticide free green spaces A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition is supposed to be, Lorraine Johnson and Sheila Colla really (for me at least) do need to be much more openly critical of the latter examples with and in their text, with their printed words, that in my opinion, the Ontario municipalities with the most restrictive and anally retentive lawn and garden by-laws and the most exaggerated pesticide usage should be specifically singled out and shown in A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition, as well as providing a list of landscapers that use only or generally native plant species. As I do indeed know from personal experience that many landscaping companies still mostly only work with non native plants, with non endemic plants (and that instead of the five stars I was originally intending for A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating a Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition, I do think that upon reconsideration, my rating will now only be four stars, although I do still very highly recommend A Garden for the Rusty-Patched Bumblebee: Creating Habitat for Native Pollinators: Ontario and Great Lakes Edition and in particular if you live in or near the Great Lakes region of Canada and the United States and want to make your gardens or your lawns wilder, more natural and native pollinator friendly).