A Bee garden
Bees need a place to get fresh, clean water. Fill a shallow container of water with pebbles or twigs for the bees
to land on while drinking. Make sure to maintain the container full of
fresh water to ensure that they know they can return to the same spot
every day in your bee garden.
More
and more gardeners are anxious to plant a bee garden. By planting a bee
garden, you too can do your part to help the bees by adding to the
shrinking inventory of flower-rich habitat in your area. In return, the
bees will pollinate your flowers, providing a bountiful harvest of
fruits, seeds and vegetables as well as the joy of watching them up
close. Here are some helpful tips to keep in mind as you grow your bee
garden.
7 Tips To Create a Bee Garden
1. Rethink Your Lawn
Replace
part or all of your front lawn grass with flowering plants, which
provides food and habitat for honey bees, bumble bees, solitary bees,
butterflies and other pollinators.
2. Select single flower tops for your bee garden
such
as daisies and marigolds, rather than double flower tops such as double
impatiens. Double headed flowers look showy but produce much less
nectar and make it much more difficult for bees to access pollen.
See also: 21 Flowers Bees Love
3. Skip the highly hybridized plants
which have been bred not to seed and thus produce very little pollen for bees.
4. Plan for blooms year-round
Plant
at least three different types of flowers in your bee garden to ensure
blooms through as many seasons as possible. This will provide bees and
other pollinators with a constant source of food.
For example:
- - Crocus, hyacinth, borage, calendula, and wild lilac provide enticing spring blooms in a bee garden.
- - Bees feast on bee balm, cosmos, echinacea, snapdragons foxglove, and hosta in the summer.
- - For fall, zinnias, sedum, asters, witch hazel and goldenrod are late bloomers that will tempt foragers.
5. Build Homes for Native Bees
Leave
a patch of the garden in a sunny spot uncultivated for native bees that
burrow. Some native bees also need access to soil surface for nesting.
For wood- and stem-nesting bees, this means piles of branches, bamboo
sections, hollow reeds, or nesting blocks made out of untreated wood.
Mason bees need a source of water and mud, and many kinds of bees are
attracted to weedy, untended hedgerows.
6. Only Use Natural Pesticides and Fertilizers
Avoid
using herbicides or pesticides in the bee garden. They not only can be
toxic to bees but also are best not introduced to children or adults
that visit your garden. Ladybugs, spiders, and praying mantises will
naturally keep pest populations in check.
7. Build a Bee Bath
Bees
need a place to get fresh, clean water. Fill a shallow container of
water with pebbles or twigs for the bees to land on while drinking. Make
sure to maintain the container full of fresh water to ensure that they
know they can return to the same spot every day in your bee garden.
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