Site icon Topanga Nursery

POLLINATOR GARDENING…the bees and butterflies and hummingbirds

I’ve worked in edible gardening and native landscaping for over 10 years. Permaculture and sustainability are the backbones of my business. My mission, both in my business and at my own home garden, is to support natural – as in earth’s own – practices. I try to create practices that acknowledge that our gardens are part of a larger ecosystem.

We need our garden to be part of the ecosystem and that’s made very evident when you look at how bees and other pollinators support our food systems. 

How many times does it take for a bee to pollinate a squash blossom (which has male and female flowers)? Minimum 7 hits. A bee or other pollinator needs to travel back and forth from male to female flower at least 7 times for the female to be fertilized and capable of growing a squash. So it’s very important to attract and keep those bees in your garden. Let me share my approach to gardening. 

You may be saying: what the honey does this have to do with pollinators? Well friend, these are your “best practices.” This is all part of an extremely important part of your garden/eco-system building journey: it’s about the foundation for a healthy thoughtful garden. You want to get a good start – the best possible start – to eliminate the need for harmful future remedies that endanger bees and other pollinators.

Most flowering plants – your pollinators’ bread and butter – want the same thing: sun (6 hrs), regular water (let the top inch or two of the soil dry out), good soil, some fertilizing, mulching – protects roots and our soil. Once or twice a year give a dose of general organic natural fertilizer, some worm castings and some extra soil and mulch. And most plants want trimmed back in the fall. These are the norms you need to follow religiously.

Speaking of fall: our seasons seem non-existent but they’re not. I get very defensive when people say we don’t have seasons. We have lots of seasons. Award season. Fire season. But srsly it’s very important to be tuned into the seasons. The real seasons. Our fall doesn’t start when Starbucks comes out with their pumpkin latte. It starts after Halloween when the days get cooler. So be tuned into your micro-season the way you are tuned into your micro-ecosystem.

Let’s talk about fertilizers. Chemical fertilizers and organic fertilizers work very differently. Chemical fertilizers are strangers to your plants. Natural fertilizers they know what to do with. This is the difference between 30-30-30 vs. 3-3-3. The numbers on a fertilizer bag refer to N-P-K.

N is Nitrogen and that’s responsible for growing stems and branches and leaves. Phosphorous is P and grows roots, fruits and flowers. K is Potassium and it also grows fruits and flowers. P and K are usually found sourced together. N can be singled out and is the easiest to add to plants. Plants can get N from potting soils and compost and worm castings and green manure. Since we are talking about bees and flowers today, we want to focus on fertilizers that give us blooms. To encourage flowers and fruits, we need to add fertilizers higher in phosphorus and do that both when you turn over your beds and when the plants are setting blooms. Bone meals are good sources of phosphorus.

Liquid fertilizers like seaweed/kelp and fish meal are also great. They can be added as a root drench or foliar feeding monthly or even bi-weekly. Concentrate 2T per gallon. 

Let’s talk about plant choices. 

BEES

So we talk about plants that are “bee magnets.” As you probably know that’s NOT how bees are drawn to plants. A plant may have a certain “magnetism” but it’s not a literal magnet.

So what does make a plant irresistible to a bee? A certain kind of flower is ideal. 

Herbs are excellent additions to pots and also make great groundcovers. They tolerate shade but need sun to flower (and attract bees) and they need regular watering. 

Native plants are used to this soil, this weather and so grow easily to plants we are trying to force into a situation. These are your hometown heroes. 

*available at Topanga Nursery

Yarrow.*

Poppies.*

Salvia.*

Penstemon.

Mallow.*

Manzanita.

Ceanothus.*

Barberry.

Milkweed.*

Dudleya.*

Redbud.

Yucca.*

Heliobore.*

Verbena.*

Non-native plants that are drought-tolerant and bee-attractors include some perennial favorites like:

Echeveria*

Lavender*

Sweet Alyssum*

Kangaroo Paw*

Lantana*

Westringia*

Breath of Heaven*

Euryops*

Aster

Beyond herbs, there are many edible and medicinal FLOWERING PLANTS that attract bees as well. These are my most-loved plants: MULTI-MULTI PURPOSE PLANTS

Calendula  E*

Wild Bee Balm/Bergamot  E*

Marigolds  E*

Nasturtium  E*

Yarrow  E*

Sunflower*E

Lavender*E

Citrus and other fruiting trees*E

There are a couple extra things you need to add to your yard to provide a HEALTHY BEE ENVIRONMENT!

Now let’s talk about dangers: those remedies we are trying to avoid.

It’s very important to DECREASE THE RISKS OF CHEMICAL CONTAMINANTS coming into contact with bees.

You can learn to live with some pests. They say if nothing’s eating your plants you’re not part of the eco-system. 

And we are building an eco-system so we are definitely a part of it.

Let’s talk about organic ‘cides. 

There are some other ways to prevent insects and disease as well.

Interplant! Add herbs to your vegetable garden and mix up the plantings of your vegetables. I don’t put one broccoli after another in a long line – I mix it up so pests and disease can’t just hop plant to plant.

Now this is different than how you can plant your bee-attracting shrubs. It’s advised to plant your pollinator-attracting shrubs in groups as our bee friends go after one VARIETY of plant at a time and if you can have them all in a group all the better. Our bee-attracting shrubs don’t have many problems with disease or pests so planting them together isn’t an issue.

However it’s always important to plant the right plant at the right time. Now at heart I’m a rebel my garden warriors but go with the flow. Follow the rules. Don’t plant plants not meant for our climate. If a plant doesn’t do well in your yard, don’t fight nature. Plant something else. Follow your eco-system’s lead.

Plant disease-resistant plants. 

So let’s say you’re still going to spray. 

Spray something organic. At home soap sprays can be very toxic. Don’t spray Dawn dishwashing liquid on your plants. Certainly don’t spray an anti-bacterial spray on your plants. A castille soap like Dr. Bronner’s is perfect. Peppermint or unscented. 1 Tbsp to a quart of water. Spray plants twice daily, in the cool of the day, until infestation clears.

Other commercial insecticidal soaps, neem oils, etc are applied as a foliar application (sprayed on plant leaves) and are effective on a wide range of plant pests when the soap spray comes into contact with the pest. Most commercially available insecticidal soaps are made of potassium salts of fatty acids and kill by disrupting the structure and permeability of insect cell membranes. Use in early morning or at night when bees are less active. 

If a plant is flowering or about to flower don’t spray it. If you can actually remove the flowers by pruning from around the treated plant, and anywhere your application may drift, you can significantly reduce risk to bees and other pollinators.

BUTTERFLIES

Our local Monarchs have only milkweed as their host plant. There is a big controversy about native vs. common/swamp/tropical milkweed. You can avoid the mess by cutting your non-native milkweed back at Halloween.

Milkweed is unusual it sets seeds and flowers at the same time. Milkweed produces many seed pods and inside the pods are many seeds. You can collect these, remove the wisps and refrigerate or freeze overnight. I had 100 milkweed plants last year and 55 cats. You have to live with chewed leaves and decimated plants. Your babies are hungry. There’s all the butterfly information here.

To create your own butterfly-attracting ecosystem and become your own Monarch Waystation visit monarchwatch.org.

Butterflies need host plants, as described above, but also nectar plants to feed.

Nectar flowers for butterflies

Cosmos*

French Marigold*E

Euryops

Candytuft

Lavender*E

Asters

Gazania*

Lantana*

Salvia*

Sunflower*E

Seaside Daisy 

Verbena*

Bee Balm*

Butterfly Bush*

Flowering Sedum*

Mallow*

Scabiosa*

Coreopsis*

Yarrow*

Zinnia

And…Ceanothus gets the award for hosting most native butterflies *

Some more tips for your butter’ ecosytsem:

HUMMINGBIRDS

Birds like a mix of tall trees, shrubs, and patches of meadow and lawn. Once hummingbirds discover your property, the same individuals are likely to return each year at about the same time; they are remarkable creatures of habit. The number of hummingbirds that frequent your yard is closely linked to the abundance of food, water, nesting sites, and perches.

Choose red, tubular flowers, as these are quick clues to a flower’s value as a hummingbird food supply. Hummingbirds are also attracted to orange and pink flowers.

Female hummingbirds usually line their nest with soft plant fibers.

Plants for Hummingbirds

Canna lily

Aloe*

Hyssop

Alstroemeria 

Bee balm 

Begonia 

Bird of paradise *

Bottlebrush bush *

Butterfly bush *

Cardinal Flower

Cosmos*

Delphinium 

Desert willow 

Fruit Trees*

Fuchsia

Hibiscus *

Honeysuckle vine *

Impatiens 

Indian hawthorn 

Mock Orange 

Indian paintbrush 

Jacaranda

Joe pye weed 

Lantana *

Lavender *

Lily of the nile*

Mandevilla*

Nasturtium*

Mexican Bird of Paradise

Passionflower Vine

Penstemon

Pentas *

Petunia 

Red hot poker *

Rose of sharon 

Salvia* 

Shrimp plant 

Snapdragon 

Trumpet Creeper vine 

Yarrow *

Zinnia*

Scarlet runner bean

Cleveland sage*

Pineapple sage also called Hummingbird sage*

Okra

Day Lily*

Tall grass (Muhly) for hiding and nest making

Thank you for your passion and interest in pollinator -gardening. Enjoy your garden and your eco-system! And visit us again soon.

Exit mobile version