Plants And Flowers To Save The Bees
An old cottage garden favourite bees are attracted to the pink or white flowers and we love the perfume.
Plants and flowers to save the bees. Read a guest blog post by michaela of the gardener s eden about container gardening with herbs and edible flowers for honeybees and their human. If you opt for an annual variety make sure you save the seeds to sow next year. Seven simple things you can do to save the bees on national honeybee day. Here s a list of 15 plants to consider if you d like to help save the bees.
Bees feast on bee balm cosmos echinacea snapdragons foxglove and hosta in the summer. Many plants rely on bees as natural pollinators to produce some of nature s most nutritious foods. These insects are responsible for pollinating around 30 of the world s crops and. Their beautiful open flowers with delicate petals are full of pollen.
It s best to plant native plants. Bees are dying at an alarming rate seriously and we need them on our planet more than you might think. The bees were oregon checker mallow and mountain pennyroyal flowers. They do well in full sun to partial shade.
Thankfully there are things we can do to save the bees like. From power plants to power and plants on the site of where the logansport power plant supplied the city energy for 132 years the new 19 million solar farm is set to supply a little less than. Each bumble bee. Poppies are so easy to grow and all of them attract bees.
Bees love the flowers from cucumbers onions and chives. Find a native plant nursery in your area and download the beesmart app which will guide you in selecting plants for pollinators specific to your area. Sedums are also excellent plants for rock gardens and walls biting stonecrop and english stonecrop sedums acre and anglicum are natives and great for bees. For fall zinnias sedum asters witch hazel and goldenrod are late bloomers that will tempt foragers.
Many plants rely on bees as natural pollinators to. Sorry to make this startling but in order to maintain a healthy food supply our busy pollinators must thrive. Keep them moderately well watered in hot and dry weather.