Lanark County’s long-term vegetation goal is to establish diverse roadsides with abundant pollinator habitat. We restore our roadsides by controlling invasive plants, planting or seeding disturbed soil, and by participating in new projects aimed at improving pollinator habitat.
Restoration Projects
Passive Restoration is used in the road allowance through a combination of mowing practices and invasive plant control. By removing invasive species this allows for other vegetation to naturalize. To learn more about how we manage invasive vegetation, visit our Vegetation Management page.
Active Restoration is done through hydroseeding native seeds after construction projects, seeding after the removal of invasive plants, and CWF Monarch Habitat Restoration projects in the county road allowance.
Monarch Habitat on Rights-of-Ways
Since 2019, the Canadian Wildlife Federation (CWF) has partnered with Lanark County on a Monarch butterfly recovery project in Eastern Ontario.
Our partnership with CWF started as a pilot project to test whether the creation of native meadows along roadsides and rights-of-way could:
- successfully control wild parsnip;
- restore Monarch butterfly habitat; and
- reduce management costs.
Thanks to funding from the Ontario Trillium Foundation, the project has created 2.25 acres of active pollinator habitat restoration sites on rights-of-ways in Lanark County. These sites not only provide value to pollinators but also serve as a model for municipalities across the province and country

County Road 21 Restoration Site
Highlights of Roadside Restoration Activities in Lanark County
- Restoration sites on County Road 1 (Rideau Ferry Road) totaling 0.86 acres of roadside.
- A project on County Road 6 (Christie Lake Road) totaling 0.66 acres of roadside.
- A project on County Road 21 (Elm Grove Road) totaling 0.60 acres of roadside.
- Hydroseeding takes place on construction projects, using a custom wildflower mix to promote desirable, pollinator-friendly plants. Since 2017, 97 km of roadsides have been hydroseeded.
To learn more about these restoration projects check out the map below.
For more information, email ivm@lanarkcounty.ca





