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How to bee-friendly this summer!

The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) and The Wildlife Trusts’ Bee Creative in the Garden! campaign is in full swing this summer and has had a fantastic response by gardeners who are creating havens for wild bees across the UK. New polls reveal how people would most like to help wild bees – planting foxgloves and letting your lawn grow long were the stand-out favourites. We asked*:

Which of these bee-friendly plants would you most like to plant in your garden? (752 votes)

Votes:

47%  Foxglove

25%  Sunflower

16%  Borage

12%  Single dahlias

Which of these actions are you most likely to do to help wild bees? (342 votes)

Votes:

60%  Let your lawn grow long

35%  Make a bee home

5%    Dig a pond

Bee Creative in the Garden supporters

Monty Don says:

“British gardeners can actively nurture and conserve the wild bee population. Gardens are always a rich source of food for wild bees and with a little care can be made even better for them without any trouble or loss of pleasure to the gardener. You do not need rare or tricky plants. In fact the opposite is true. Bees need pollen and the smaller flowers of unhybridised species are likely to be a much richer source than huge show blooms on plants that are the result of elaborate breeding. Any flower that is open and simple, such as members of the daisy family, or any that are set like a lollipop on a stick, such as scabious, and all members of the thistle family, are ideal for attracting honey bees, which have rather short tongues so need easy access. Bumblebees have longer tongues so are better adapted for plants that have more of a funnel shape, such as foxgloves.”

Go wild for these bees this August!

Late summer is an excellent time to look for wild bees, including some more unusual species and recent arrivals to the UK:

For more information about these bees, please see the Bees, Wasps and Ants Recording Society website www.bwars.com/

Take action for wild bees this summer!

Enter our ‘Bee Creative’ photo competition or download a wild bee-friendly gardening guide which contains lots of facts about the different species of wild bee, their lifecycles and how they nest, as well as practical steps gardeners can take to help them! All at http://wildaboutgardens.org.uk/

The wild bee-friendly gardening guide, ‘Get your garden buzzing for bees’, is free to download and contains lots of facts about the different species of wild bee, their lifecycles and how they nest, as well as practical steps gardeners can take to help them.  It is available to download at http://wildaboutgardens.org.uk/

Enter our Bee Creative photo competition! Gardeners, gardening groups and schools are encouraged to share how they’ve welcomed wild bees into their gardens by posting a picture on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram – using the hashtag #wildaboutgardens and the category being entered – of their bee-friendly area, whether that be a tailor-made bee home, a flower-packed border or a wall that bees have made their own.

A list of the wildlife gardening events taking place can be found at wildaboutgardensweek.org.uk – please note that more will be added as the season progresses.

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