Bee Friendly and Save the Hives
1:00 AM | Posted by
Donald
The bees are welcome in my garden and we are fortunate to have three feral (wild) bee hives located within three miles of our home. How do we know?
A friend of ours, Ronnie Bouchon, is a beekeeper of managed hives. He created and supports a website called Save the Hives in an effort to help protect feral bee hives. The site includes a map of hive locations. Our neighbors registered their hives for the Feral Bee Project and that's how we discovered the homes of our visiting bees. You can check the map to see if there are hives located in your area. The Save the Hives site includes information about how to "beeline" to find the location of hives. If you have located a feral hive, you can also register it on the site.
A guest column, Let's Hear It for the Bees, in the New York Times provides a fascinating story about how the bees know when flowers produce nectar:
achillea
agastache
azalea
buddleia
echinacea
echinops
fennel
lantana
lavender
nepeta
oakleaf holly
petunia
magnolia
monarda
roses
rosemary
salvia
sedum
verbena
vitex
Of course, there are many more nectar plants than what I am growing. Gardeners who grow vegetables and fruit are providing nectar for the bees. There are also food sources among the wild flowering native plants, weeds and clover, too.
Gardeners love to have colorful blooms in spring, summer and fall. We have a great reason to go buy more nectar plants - we need to provide bees, both managed and feral, with blooms during these seasons, too!
Photo and story by Freda Cameron
A friend of ours, Ronnie Bouchon, is a beekeeper of managed hives. He created and supports a website called Save the Hives in an effort to help protect feral bee hives. The site includes a map of hive locations. Our neighbors registered their hives for the Feral Bee Project and that's how we discovered the homes of our visiting bees. You can check the map to see if there are hives located in your area. The Save the Hives site includes information about how to "beeline" to find the location of hives. If you have located a feral hive, you can also register it on the site.
A guest column, Let's Hear It for the Bees, in the New York Times provides a fascinating story about how the bees know when flowers produce nectar:
Flowers of a given species all produce nectar at about the same time each day, as this increases the chances of cross-pollination. The trick works because pollinators, which in most cases means the honeybee, concentrate foraging on a particular species into a narrow time-window. In effect the honeybee has a daily diary that can include as many as nine appointments — say, 10:00 a.m., lilac; 11:30 a.m., peonies; and so on. The bees’ time-keeping is accurate to about 20 minutes.Here are a few of the plants in my garden that are loved by bees (and butterflies):
achillea
agastache
azalea
buddleia
echinacea
echinops
fennel
lantana
lavender
nepeta
oakleaf holly
petunia
magnolia
monarda
roses
rosemary
salvia
sedum
verbena
vitex
Of course, there are many more nectar plants than what I am growing. Gardeners who grow vegetables and fruit are providing nectar for the bees. There are also food sources among the wild flowering native plants, weeds and clover, too.
Gardeners love to have colorful blooms in spring, summer and fall. We have a great reason to go buy more nectar plants - we need to provide bees, both managed and feral, with blooms during these seasons, too!
Photo and story by Freda Cameron
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Categories
- artists
- Asclepias
- Asclepias incarnata
- book review
- butterfly garden
- Container garden
- cottage garden
- Deer
- deer resistant
- drought and xeric
- environment
- Europe
- favorite accent
- favorite combination
- Flower
- flower bulbs and seeds
- food
- fragrance garden
- Garden
- garden design
- garden inspiration
- Gardens
- Gravel
- gravel garden
- home
- Home and Garden
- Hunger Games
- Irises
- Japanese iris
- Leaf
- Little Lime
- meadow
- Monarch
- Monarch Butterflies
- Monarch Butterfly
- Monarda
- Monet
- musings
- North Carolina
- nursery review
- Pest and Disease Control
- Plant
- plant care
- Plants A-F
- Plants G-L
- Plants M-Z
- Public
- Purple milkweed
- rabbit resistant
- Recreation
- rose_campion
- seasons
- Shopping
- Shrub
- sources
- Stemware
- Sweet pea
- technology
- travel
- United States
- Wayside
- wildlife
- Wine
Archive
-
▼
2009
(182)
-
▼
April
(17)
- Bee Friendly and Save the Hives
- A New Volunteer in the Garden
- Have No Sphere? Grow Alliums
- Heat Wave in April
- Deer in Your Garden? Meet the Lamiaceae Family
- Let the Blooms Begin
- The Six Plants That I Can't Live Without
- Deer Resistant Spanish Bluebells
- Garden Critters Day
- Hummingbird Play
- First Hummingbird in the Garden!
- Container Garden: Purple, Purple and More Purple
- Spring for Fall Flowers
- Have You Hugged Your Plants Today?
- Cute, But Not the Easter Bunny!
- Gardening - Is it Work or Play?
- No Fooling - It Is Spring
-
▼
April
(17)
Powered by Blogger.
Popular Posts
-
The image of a table laden with a bountiful harvest isn't just for Thanksgiving. Local farmers' markets and Community Supported Agri...
-
By Freda Cameron Although the weather has passed for planting, this is a great time to plan a garden with the children in your family. Durin...
-
George Washington's Mount Vernon is a reminder of the self-sufficiency of farms of historical significance. Did you know that Washingto...
-
Coreopsis ' Star Cluster ' in bloom with companions Eucomis 'Sparkling Burgundy' ( foliage left) echinacea (multiple...
-
There are few plants in the garden that are virtually maintenance-free. My favorite foliage plant is carex hachijoensis 'Evergold' ...
-
I tried to make a garden plan when I spread the soil in fall 2006 to create the outer gardens. I researched and researched the right plant...
-
These "green" disfigured coneflowers were removed and destroyed. I didn't plant any new " green bloom " echinace...
-
Katie and the Giant Cabbage The idea for Katie’s Krops began with a 9 year old girl and a 40 pound cabbage. In 2008 Katie brought home a ti...
-
May I see your identification please? Theft comes in many forms and recently garden bloggers have discovered that there are bad guys who wi...
-
By Freda Cameron What is the process of working with a professional garden designer? I asked this question at a local garden center that ha...
0 comments:
Post a Comment