My ivy (at least 20 meters tall and around 25 meters wide thats no exaggeration!!!) is covered in polinators, my honey suckle has a few long tonged bees (for some reason it's still in bloom?
Its off topic a smudge but my garlic chivesstill has a few hover flies hanging around it.
I can't upload pictures so give me your email and I'll send pictures of it, you'll be impressed!
I've still got bees (mostly Common Carders) here in S_W Scotland (we don't see them in early Spring), and they seem to prefer Cerinthe (probably will be over by the end of this week), heucheras, golden oregano, sedum matrona and lavender (also giving their last). Planted nine 'Perfect for Pollinators' Scabious last year, They grew horizontally along the ground, apart from their flowering tips, I didn't notice any interest from the bees and not one grew this year. Bees and butterflies very much like one of our Buddlejas, apparently especially when most of the flowers on a spike have gone brown, but not the other one (which has a very, almost sickly, sweet perfume).
Strange there weren't any on the Scabious, what variety was it? I had seven "Devils Bit Scabious" come up last year (just dense mats of leaves) and they all flowered late on this year, pretty much everything else in the garden never has anything on it but I'd say at any one time on these plants there's usually one or two butterflys and about 10-15 bees or hoverflies.
They're Bi-Annual though so unless they've seeded themselves I won't have them next year.
Lots of them about here (N Liverpool/SW Lancs) in the warm sunshine of the last few days, and all over the ivy on my shed roof. My friends's many hives haven't been very productive this year though.
I think they're biennial, Tanglefoot, rather than biannual.
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My ivy (at least 20 meters tall and around 25 meters wide thats no exaggeration!!!) is covered in polinators, my honey suckle has a few long tonged bees (for some reason it's still in bloom?
Its off topic a smudge but my garlic chivesstill has a few hover flies hanging around it.
I can't upload pictures so give me your email and I'll send pictures of it, you'll be impressed!
- hertfordshire - south east England
I've still got bees (mostly Common Carders) here in S_W Scotland (we don't see them in early Spring), and they seem to prefer Cerinthe (probably will be over by the end of this week), heucheras, golden oregano, sedum matrona and lavender (also giving their last). Planted nine 'Perfect for Pollinators' Scabious last year, They grew horizontally along the ground, apart from their flowering tips, I didn't notice any interest from the bees and not one grew this year. Bees and butterflies very much like one of our Buddlejas, apparently especially when most of the flowers on a spike have gone brown, but not the other one (which has a very, almost sickly, sweet perfume).
Strange there weren't any on the Scabious, what variety was it? I had seven "Devils Bit Scabious" come up last year (just dense mats of leaves) and they all flowered late on this year, pretty much everything else in the garden never has anything on it but I'd say at any one time on these plants there's usually one or two butterflys and about 10-15 bees or hoverflies.
They're Bi-Annual though so unless they've seeded themselves I won't have them next year.
Bumbles of some sort on the buddliea in front of our sittingroom window yesterday late afternoon.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.
Lots of them about here (N Liverpool/SW Lancs) in the warm sunshine of the last few days, and all over the ivy on my shed roof. My friends's many hives haven't been very productive this year though.
I think they're biennial, Tanglefoot, rather than biannual.
Not seen any today though weather is drizzly in suffolk. plenty of hover flies and wasp on flowering ivy a lot of blue bottles too yesterday.
rescued a Hornet from water butt yesterday got it out on end of broom flicked out then ran lovely useful critters but i am a coward.
Hi Amanda, I'm from Suffolk but now we're up in Norfolk.
We saw a beautiful hornet in Norfolk yesterday when we had lunch by the river.
Gardening in Central Norfolk on improved gritty moraine over chalk ... free-draining.