Planting Wild Flowers in Gardens Boosts Biodiversity and Attracts Insects

A small group launched a call for interest in 2022 and sowed flower beds in around fifteen gardens for free. There will be a few more gardens added this year. The sowers began their day at Christine’s garden in Limal on Saturday.

Christine, an enthusiastic resident of Limal, got excited regarding the project when she saw it on a Facebook group. She offered the sowers several places in her garden and they took the best spots. She hopes that the project will continue to grow bigger and bigger every year.

François, Christine’s neighbor, is also interested in the initiative and believes that it deserves encouragement. He thinks that it’s a great project because there are more spaces nowadays that lack flowers for pollination and bees.

In 2022, following having launched a call for interest, the small group therefore sowed flower beds in around fifteen gardens, free of charge. This year there will be a few more. This Saturday, the sowers started their day at Christine’s, in Limal.

I got excited right away when I saw this on a Facebook group, explains this enthusiastic Lima resident. We are really delighted with this project and I hope that it will take on greater and greater scope from year to year. I offered them several places in my garden and they took the best.

François, Christine’s neighbor, is also very interested. According to him, this initiative deserves to be encouraged.

It’s a great project because it’s true that there are more and more spaces that lack flowers for pollination and bees.



In a world where climate change and environmental degradation are becoming increasingly pressing issues, initiatives like the flower bed sowers are more important than ever. By bringing nature back into our gardens and public spaces, they are doing their part to support the biodiversity that sustains us all. And as the project grows and gains support from people like Christine and François, we can only hope that it will inspire others to follow their lead and contribute to a greener, more sustainable future.

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Alexandra Hartman Editor-in-Chief

Editor-in-Chief Prize-winning journalist with over 20 years of international news experience. Alexandra leads the editorial team, ensuring every story meets the highest standards of accuracy and journalistic integrity.

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