The warm weather is here early this season and your instinct is to get out and clean up your garden and the leftover leaves you missed in the Fall. While you get ready for Spring there are many native pollinators that are still dormant waiting for a few more weeks when our weather is consistently in the 50s. This is when native pollinators will take flight and get busy working to build up their colonies. Sure the honey bees are flying but they have a much different survival methodology than our native pollinators. Native Pollinators are AnnualsIf we think of pollinators like our garden plants then it is safe to classify native pollinators as annuals where honeybees can be classified as perennials. Our native pollinators include bumble bees, mason bees, carpenter bees, and mining bees to name a few. These bees will spend the warmer months building their nests and raising brood in small hives or communities of other bees. These native pollinators are important partners in the growing cycle to many of the plants, fruits and vegetables we cherish. When it gets cooler in the Fall their offspring will look for burrows to spend the Winter and repeat the cycle in the Spring. Many of these pollinators seek burrows in the stalks of dead plants, under leaf piles, holes in timber, and the relative warmth of your garden soil where there are many pockets to be protected from the hard cold of the Winter months. Garden CLEAN-UP Tips to Protect PollinatorsIf you are cleaning up your garden due so carefully. Here are some hints that we tell gardeners to follow:
We hope these tips can help you start your gardening for 2022 off on the right foot. Please feel free to contact us if you have any pollinator questions.
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SEABEE HONEY BLOGAuthorA beekeeper in New Hampshire [email protected] Archives
December 2023
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