Don't forget solid pieces of untreated lumber or logs, not sure the depth, with no holes pre drilled, for carpenter bees. People hate them because they cause damage, which is sad because they are important just like other native bees. We love them, and giving them a home means no or minimal damage to structures. We took old tier poles out of a tobacco barn and used them as fence posts, and they were carpenter bee homes already, so we brought the pollinators to the garden and it did extremely well.
@@coater31ok but any amount of stagnant water will also be infested with mosquitoes and bugs in my yard :( one time it rained and I accidentally left a bucket out so when i went to pour it out in the morning a hornet had already drowned itself in it and something else, i think an earwig
Don't forget solid pieces of untreated lumber or logs, not sure the depth, with no holes pre drilled, for carpenter bees. People hate them because they cause damage, which is sad because they are important just like other native bees. We love them, and giving them a home means no or minimal damage to structures. We took old tier poles out of a tobacco barn and used them as fence posts, and they were carpenter bee homes already, so we brought the pollinators to the garden and it did extremely well.
That’s excellent. Thanks for providing this perspective!
What does a bee bath do?
Gives bees, butterflies, and other pollinators water to drink
@@coater31ok but any amount of stagnant water will also be infested with mosquitoes and bugs in my yard :( one time it rained and I accidentally left a bucket out so when i went to pour it out in the morning a hornet had already drowned itself in it and something else, i think an earwig
As a Native American I approve and appreciate this message haha! Have a blessed one keep it tradish!
Nobody asked
T Shirt 🔥
I didn’t know any of it