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Make your outdoor space bee-friendly

Attracting bees and other pollinators is a good way to help the environment. Whether you have a garden or balcony, here are some tips to get your space buzzing.

Close-up of bee flying close to some blossom

Bees are the humble heroes of the plant world. The buzz around, pollinating all our plants. Without the bees we’d have no plants to eat, so it’s important we look after them.

Making your outdoor space bee-friendly has two major benefits. It keeps bees, butterflies and other pollinators fed and happy, plus it will mean your space is covered in flowers all year round.

There are some key points to remember if you want to attract bees to your garden or patio.

  • Bees like a varied diet, so plant a range of different flowers
  • Use plants that flower at different times, to feed bees throughout the year
  • Deadhead your plants to keep them flowering for longer
  • Provide shelter for bees with bee hotels or piles of sticks

Here are some ways to keep the bees happy from spring to winter.

African daisies in a grey plastic cylinder pot, a white hydrangea in a black plastic reservoir pot, fairy bellflowers in a white plastic reservoir pot and an agapanthus in a black plastic cylinder pot grouped together on a patio
African daisies in a grey plastic cylinder pot, a white hydrangea in a black plastic reservoir pot, fairy bellflowers in a white plastic reservoir pot and an agapanthus in a black plastic cylinder pot grouped together on a patio

Plant a rainbow

Did you know that different pollinators are attracted to different colours? Bees particularly like blue, purple and yellow flowers. Butterflies love white and pink. If you plant lots of colours you’re basically creating the ultimate pollinator buffet.

The obvious bonus, of course, is that your outdoor space will be an explosion of colour.

A fatsia japonica in a black cube pot outdoors on a deck area
A fatsia japonica in a black cube pot outdoors on a deck area
Ivy in a grey fibrestone trough outside on a window ledge
Ivy in a grey fibrestone trough outside on a window ledge

Deadhead your flowers

Sounds gruesome but it’s not. Deadheading is simply the process of removing wilted flowers from your plant. If you pick off dead flowers you’ll encourage your plants to replace them with new ones. That means more flowers for you and more food for the bees.

Create shelters for bees

Bees don’t spend their entire lives buzzing around. They need a rest sometimes. Different types of bees live in different places. While some like hives or nests, solitary bees like to lay their eggs in small holes. Provide them with bee hotels, either made from a selection of sticks and wood, or more easily, bought ready-made.

Stacked logs with holes drilled into them
Stacked logs with holes drilled into them

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