Last month was Bee Aware Month 2021 so I thought it was the perfect opportunity to discuss how we can supply bees with an ongoing supply of pollen and nectar throughout the year by planting bee-friendly trees and plants in our gardens.
Bees are incredible insects; however, they are under threat all over the world. Bees and other insects play a vital role by helping to pollinate our food. When bees forage for nectar and pollen they pollinate each flower that they visit which increases crop yield. Without bees many food crops that need pollination by insects could not be grown on a scale large enough to feed us.
How then can you help these important insects to thrive? Simply plant something to create a bee friendly paradise in your garden.
The easiest thing to grow are herbs. They do well in small pots with a bit of sun. Try something you can use in cooking such as basil, borage, rosemary, or thyme or any other herb of your choice. Just remember to let some flower as you want to attract bees to your herb garden.
Anything that flowers will be perfect for all sorts of pollination. Try to have a couple of the plants flowering in your garden all year – rosemary is particularly good as it flowers for longer periods of the year when other herbs remain dormant.
Add a little Earth Zing to the soil before planting your herbs to give them the best start.
Top herbs to attract bees
Phacelia (purple tansy – a relative of borage): a very good food source for bees and beneficial insects such as hoverflies which eat aphids. A fast growing annual, growing 1-1.2 metres high, which grows well in dry ground.
Borage: has high levels of nectar and pollen and has vibrant blue petals, however, it has a short life so sow seeds in succession over the seasons, starting in spring through till autumn. It prefers moist ground in a sunny position.
Thyme and rosemary: supply high levels of both pollen and nectar. Hardy and grows well in all areas, given sun and free draining soil.
Other ideas for herbal plants include basil, lavender, mint, sage, nasturtium, lemon balm and echinacea.
To benefit bees, plant your herbs in groups that include a variety of herb species, so that the bees do not have fly so far and use precious energy.
Lastly please remember to avoid the use of pesticides around your honeybee garden.
If you have a larger garden area there are also many trees and shrubs available which provide nectar for both birds and bees.
A few good examples include: pussy willow, wattles, kowhai [Sophora tetraptera and microphylla] matipo, pittosporum tenufolium, cabbage tree cordyline australis, hebes [many species], flax [Phormium tenax], and Lacebark [hoheria populnea]
For more information, please visit Apiculture New Zealand’s Bee Aware Month website here.
See you next month,