Це відео не доступне.
Перепрошуємо.

10X Your Vegetable Harvest - Attract the Best Pollinators to Your Garden.

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 16 кві 2020
  • In this video we will talk about the ways to attract the best pollinators to your garden to increase your harvests 10 fold.
    My Lavender Video: • Planting and Growing L...
    Use this time zone converter to find out what time it will be where you live!
    www.timeanddat...
    Product Links
    Butterfly Enclosure: amzn.to/2RHR9F2
    Rooting Hormone: amzn.to/2XG8Icg
    Bee House/Hotel: amzn.to/3biCTKn

КОМЕНТАРІ • 312

  • @Jannylou100
    @Jannylou100 4 роки тому +98

    I’m a beekeeper and need to correct your comment about honey bees not being interested in pollen. They gather pollen in little sacks on their back legs and carry it back to their hive where it is made into bee bread which is used to feed eggs and uncapped larvae.

    • @lvp6905
      @lvp6905 4 роки тому +3

      Jan B - Have you seen Paul Stamets work on saving bees ? Look on his website fungi.com.

    • @Jannylou100
      @Jannylou100 4 роки тому +5

      Lynn Price thanks for sharing that. It was really interesting. Mites are a problem we have and it’s effects do destroy hives.

    • @lvp6905
      @lvp6905 4 роки тому +7

      Jan B - you are welcome, I participate in savings bees as much as possible. Yesterday, we had a swarm at my office. I hope I find their new hive spot. Happy new keeping!

    • @MasteredMirages
      @MasteredMirages Рік тому +1

      How much space does a hive need? Would they bother the neighbors?

    • @selecttravelvacations7472
      @selecttravelvacations7472 4 місяці тому +1

      I thought he was talking about the solitary bees, not the honey bees. The point was that they aren’t like the honeybees. That’s how I heard it anyway.

  • @Deklectic
    @Deklectic 3 роки тому +27

    I have a butterfly bush somewhat spilling into my garden due to it being so huge and the flowers weighing it down, but that thing alone draws ALL of the pollinators into my yard and garden. I sit outside and watch them at times its the most beautiful peaceful sight seeing soooo many different (species) of insects and birds at once co existing and sharing the same flowers not afraid of, bothering or attacking one another but simply just being and moving on with their business no drama what so ever. We humans need to take notes.. It sounds crazy but that butterfly bush in my yard symbolizes the beautiful Diversity in our world and how we are so different yet all have the SAME goal which is to LIVE and achieve happiness, and peace. I wish anyone reading this peace and happiness in your life. 😃

    • @greeneyedlady5580
      @greeneyedlady5580 2 роки тому +1

      That sounds incredible! Thanks for sharing the peaceful thoughts.

    • @jeff20583
      @jeff20583 2 роки тому +1

      Very well said and sooo true

    • @grantwest7942
      @grantwest7942 2 роки тому +3

      Butterfly bushes are invasive. 😬

    • @pamelacox540
      @pamelacox540 Рік тому +1

      I used to plant all kinds of butterfly bushes. They’re easy and pretty. Unfortunately I’ve learned that although pollinators gather around butterfly bushes, the nutrition from butterfly bushes compared to native plants is poor. I know! The naturalist told me butterfly bushes attract pollinators like Coke machines in a high school attract teenagers!

    • @tracycrider7778
      @tracycrider7778 Рік тому

      This❤

  • @bladimirohernandez7400
    @bladimirohernandez7400 4 роки тому +47

    I'll admit it, I've become a bee hoarder! At the start of this spring I began planting flowers. Now it seems like every bee in the neighborhood is self isolating in my yard. I too was shocked. In recent years I did notice a decline in their numbers.

    • @elizabethhoeppner8881
      @elizabethhoeppner8881 Рік тому

      I do try to allow indigenous plants to attract pollinators, but no one around me cares. Neighborhoods are built with close homes and cut down trees and destroy natural plants. My neighbor has destroyed her land and now is piling up garbage bags. Progressive liberals feel sorry for her and want tiny crowded homes. However, they drive electric cars so that somehow takes care of all the damage to the environment they have caused .

  • @bholmes5490
    @bholmes5490 4 роки тому +41

    Yes, have noticed less butterflies, less birds, less bees. Then again, I was raised in the 60's when flocks of birds flew, and children ran with butterflies. It is a different world. You make a good point about what can happen with our food supply if we continue to ignore what is happening. Humans rely on pollinators, as do other animals for their food supply.

    • @anthonyinfelise1412
      @anthonyinfelise1412 2 місяці тому

      There is still flocks of birds. And children ran with butterflies? Lol

  • @debbiebevis3806
    @debbiebevis3806 4 роки тому +19

    I have only seen a couple of bees this year. I am really concerned about this. I am trying to hand pollinate my squash and zucchini. It’s crazy. My grandfather farmed all of his life and I can guarantee you that he never had to hand pollinate anything. By the way he lived to be 102 years old. Always raised his own food. Thanks for your helpful videos

  • @valeriesanchez3074
    @valeriesanchez3074 4 роки тому +11

    I've been watching videos on beekeeping. It's very fascinating. What amazes me is their body language how they communicate where flowers are. The queen bee will however find a nearby hive to mate with and she'll return to the original hive to lay her eggs. It would be great to have a hive in your garden. Since the queen lays about 1,000 eggs a day. As bees are scarce in nature, you can find a few Amazon vendors who sell 3 lb of honey bees. Just a thought.

  • @msdramamusic
    @msdramamusic 4 роки тому +20

    This year I incorporated a lot of flowers in my garden. I had 12 milkweed plants but they ate them all. I've released 4 already and I am waiting on 10 more to emerge. I planted a lot of sunflowers this year. I also rooted my lavender in water in a 2 weeks along with my other herbs. I'm going to do more because it's faster than growing from seeds.

  • @TravelAgentCale
    @TravelAgentCale 4 роки тому +11

    Pollinators are the most essential piece of successful gardening! Great job with your explanation to inform those beginning gardeners!

  • @timbuktu2758
    @timbuktu2758 4 роки тому +9

    I noticed the lack of bees in my garden a few years ago.I decided to do something and grew plants which bees and bumblebees like....such as comfrey,borage and wild geranium.And they absolutly love it .Thank you Brian for this important video....we need those pollinators!

  • @TheJpaul999
    @TheJpaul999 4 роки тому +5

    For my zone 8b garden I have 20 x 4 pollinator zone. I have a large mix of plants, but mostly I attract bees. Here are some of the ones I've found the bees love:
    Cat mint. They love that stuff
    Lavender
    Bee Balm
    Rosemary, thyme, sage, marjoram, mint, and basil in bloom.
    Clover - I put it the grass and don't cut too low. They love that too.
    I'm still experimenting with other plants to bring in even more.

    • @tsugima6317
      @tsugima6317 Рік тому

      I live in zone 8 as well, and I have a backyard full of native violets. It is a pollinator plant for the Gulf Fritillary butterfly. I don't spray them with any pesticide and I can also use them as a spinach substitute in salads and quiche using small tender leaves. They seed themselves and don't grow past ankle height.

  • @lepidlover0557
    @lepidlover0557 3 роки тому +6

    I have noticed a lack in the amount of pollinators as well.
    When I was a kid, there were butterflies everywhere! I'd see them all the time on the bus ride home from school, usually either sulphurs or tiger swallowtails. We have two lantana bushes that grow on our property, a plant that is KNOWN for its ability to attract lots of butterflies. They used to COVER the bushes every summer and my little sister and I would just stalk and chase them.
    Now, we see a LOT less fluttering around our yard. The lantana bushes flower, but aren't covered in butterflies and look sad because of the lack of activity. On a okay day, you'll probably see 2 or 3 butterflies on them and of the same species. Butterflies are an indicator species and help to determine the health of the environment because of their fragility, so if you're seeing less and less of them then something is off.
    Even on days where the butterflies are more active than usual, you'll notice a lack in diversity of different species of butterflies. You'll probably have a day where you see only fritillaries or sulphurs flying around but no other butterfly species!!
    Im even starting to see less bumblebees every year! They SWARMED to our azalea bushes in the spring!!

  • @KeikoMushi
    @KeikoMushi 4 роки тому +6

    I made the fateful choice of planting out Thai basil last year and the bees absolutely love the flowers. I've made it my goal to grow more in the upcoming year because they not only attract pollinators (and taste good), but also seem to be drought tolerant. Purple basil also showed similar traits and I want to grow more of it as well.

  • @daves8429
    @daves8429 4 роки тому +3

    I have been planting torch sunflower, also known as Mexican sunflower. Bees, swallow tail butterflies, and monarchs love them. I live in the metro Detroit area. Dill and the torch sunflower bring a lot of them. I have double downed on them,they are starting under my grow lights right now!

    • @reinyg
      @reinyg 4 роки тому +1

      Dave S I agree on the Mexican Sunflowers plus they self seed every year.

    • @msbush1974
      @msbush1974 3 місяці тому

      I was from Detroit also..and have started the same gigantic sunflowes Today the took out the weaker ones. Then I went to Amazon for the long stakes they require! Hope we both get lucky!

  • @victorm7274
    @victorm7274 3 роки тому +2

    Basil is perfect for bees. I planted around 5 different variety of basil . I’ve had basil for years since I leave it to selfseed itself. I’ve not bought store basil for at least 7 years now.

  • @wi54725
    @wi54725 4 роки тому +5

    I just learned this from a professional beekeeper that lives in our neighborhood. He places buckets in trees with a lemon slice in a pill bottle to attract bees to remove them from other peoples' properties. He also places lemon peel slices in his garden to do the same thing. He simply hangs a slice of lemon peel adjacent to where he has blooming flowers.

  • @843bigj
    @843bigj 4 роки тому +3

    Our fig trees seem to attract a lot of bees and we've never been stung picking fruit (so far!). We love them.

    • @tsugima6317
      @tsugima6317 Рік тому

      Fig trees are pollinated by tiny little wasps from the inside.... the bees you see are probably drawn by the sweetness of the ripe figs.

  • @sallyride5618
    @sallyride5618 4 роки тому +1

    I belong to several beekeepers groups on Facebook. Our bees are dying out throughout the world. In USA we have a severe problem with Verroa mites, among other bee ailments and viruses. In addition, recent forest fires wiped out quite a few colonies/ apiaries. So, you are correct in seeing them less and less.

  • @farmerbob4554
    @farmerbob4554 4 роки тому +3

    You are so right about bees liking Lavender. They’re all over our Lavender patch. I grow branching sunflowers as a bee attractor on the edge of the veg garden. I get cut flowers and also sturdy stalks for bean poles, etc. Thanks for the cool video. Looking forward to the live stream tomorrow. Reminder set!

  • @evana2511
    @evana2511 4 роки тому +8

    Yes, I've noticed a reduction in pollinators. I really appreciate this video.

  • @lucythomas4077
    @lucythomas4077 3 роки тому +2

    Thanks for reminding all of us how much we need pollinators to survive. I love bees and especially bumble bees which I have only seen one a year. And love that little pup next to you. How adorable and cute.

  • @digsindirt4490
    @digsindirt4490 3 роки тому +4

    I know this is an older video, but I wanted to add... Garlic Chives are huge bee magnets. I grow them in z9a but don’t harvest. I let them flower and seed every year. The bees go crazy for the blooms, especially in fall and winter.

    • @fatou1975
      @fatou1975 Рік тому +1

      Thanks for sharing. I am going to apply this for my new garden journey as I just moved from Belgium to South Carolina

  • @grannysweet
    @grannysweet 4 роки тому +2

    Plant borage everywhere. Empty lots, cracks in the cement, ends of long driveways, one in each cornor of your yard (remember kids,dogs,cats and bees dont mix) away from people areas. I plant it in the areas of unwanted trespassing. Hundreds of bees are a great deterrent to unwanted foot traffic. Borage makes a great refeshing sun tea, to beat the heat. Borage saves bees.

  • @charlieboring7269
    @charlieboring7269 4 роки тому +2

    In Fairfax Virginia pollinators have become very minimal. To help with this problem, I have built a solitary bee house to attract solitary bees. I also plant nustritiums and marigolds among my garden vegetables. I practice the "edible gardening" technique and have azaleas and other flowers close to my vegetables.

  • @laurenannkattner7030
    @laurenannkattner7030 4 роки тому +2

    Milkweed surprisingly just appeared in our garden one year. So we set aside some land around it ever since.

  • @karaamundson3964
    @karaamundson3964 4 роки тому +9

    If you live in a cold area, throw the seeds of milkweed out where you want them in the fall. They need a cold spell.
    I live in KY, where springs can freeze. Never mind that! I sow basil seeds straight into the ground and in about 2-3 weeks, there are the very cute, VERY robust seedlings. I have two now and expecting more, of a great Italian variety. The plants in the past were strong & beautiful.
    Right now I have two gardens, totalling 1900 square'. They're bothe community gardens. The one I've had the longest & shared with my bf is the beautiful, "chocolate cake" garden...we each get 100'! I have a chunk of catmint, collards, one row of lettuce, basil, chicory...and 50' of local pollinators 💚🌼🌻💚. In the other garden, where the soil is one step away from cement, I have a perennial pollinators garden and several new sections dug & lightly amended with weed material & compost. They're coming along! I have a few more demanding pollinators in the old (richer) mound, and I'm moving society garlic all over the place. Lots of others too--2nd-year carrots, plenty of herbs, all the things that baffle beetles and draw the bees & butterflies.
    I hope this will be a good year out at the Rough & Ready.

  • @HappinessFactoryGardens
    @HappinessFactoryGardens 4 роки тому +2

    I’ve definitely noticed less and less bees throughout my 30 years on this planet, but luckily we have some carpenter bees that call our property home. No idea they were better pollinators! I will be making a “bee hotel” ASAP to make sure they don’t make their way to the neighbors that spray them...

  • @debbiewicks9458
    @debbiewicks9458 2 роки тому

    I live in Florida. I planted milkweed in several areas of my garden just for the monarch butterflies. i constantly get monarch catepillars going into chrysallis. I also have lots of parsley for the swallowtail butterflies. I cut the milkweed plants in half everytime they have been eaten by the catepillars. I take the cuts and set them back in the soil -- and they grow on their own! So I constantly have monarch butterflies flying around my garden. I feel very privileged to be able to help out the monarch butterfly population. I helped feed and grow over 100 monarch butterflies last year alone.

  • @joanies6778
    @joanies6778 4 роки тому +4

    The former owners of my 100 yr old house were all organic gargeners. Now I understand why the big milkweed plants found over near the garden. Lots of seeds got harvested this year... but I will plant them outside my fence because they are toxic to dogs. He tries to eat just about anything. I also have extra herbs that will go to flower. I planted about 2 dozen lavender from seed through stratification process and they are all doing well. Never knew about propagation through cuttings.

  • @Kimohoy
    @Kimohoy 4 роки тому +3

    Since the lock down here in Hawaii I have noticed a large up tick in the insect population! I have lots of flowers that attract Bees and Butterfly's but they seem to really like my Ginger, Basil, Hibiscus and Plumeria. I still do a lot of hand pollination though, it just seems I get more produce!!

  • @luzamart2
    @luzamart2 4 роки тому +2

    I just added a small water fountain to my veggie garden. I have at least 5-6 bees drinking water everyday.

  • @krickette5569
    @krickette5569 4 роки тому +2

    I live about halfway up a mountain of red clay so in order to garden I had to build a raised bed. It is a large bed, about 15 x 20 and I surrounded the entire thing with flower beds that are full of plants that attract pollinators. It helps in attracting them but even with all those plants I am still seeing less and less pollinators every year. This year I decided to order myself some bees to help fix that problem. I have their hive set about 30 yards away from my garden. If all goes well I will likely add another hive, possibly two, next year. If more people would take the time to learn about bees, ( I took a couple local FREE classes) and then become beekeepers we could fix the problem. Thanks for this video!

  • @nathanlau3275
    @nathanlau3275 4 роки тому +5

    I planted Borage, and that really drew the bees.

    • @Talkingdaisy-no6nu
      @Talkingdaisy-no6nu 3 роки тому

      I had borage last year and had hundreds of bees on it every morning! I missed my window to plant it this year and I’m kicking myself. I’m having to hand pollinate as I’m not seeing as many bees :(

  • @trinhzphotography350
    @trinhzphotography350 4 роки тому +1

    If you are able to grow any variety of Hollyhocks the bees love these. I have one Russian Yellow Hollyhock in my back yard and the bees come in droves. The flowers are beautiful. The stalk grows between 8-12 feet and the entire plant is medicinal. P.s. red spider mites also love it. Just organically spray them. Good luck with your gardens this year.

  • @halohalo7425
    @halohalo7425 4 роки тому +2

    Great suggestions and information! Thank you for sharing your experiences. I raise monarchs in our garden. All by accident from purchasing milkweed from a store and noticed caterpillars. Read up on how to raise them and went back to the store to collect all the monarch caterpillars and put them in my batch of milkweeds. Now it’s a hobby and helps my children appreciate Gods creation and that everything on earth has its purpose. Also we purchased a Bee Hotel... so cute! ✌🏼

  • @sharitate7876
    @sharitate7876 2 роки тому +1

    There are definitely fewer bees. Especially honey bees. I’m adding a lot of flowers and herbs this year for them and looking into bee 🐝 keeping in future seasons.

  • @drusillawinters212
    @drusillawinters212 4 роки тому +3

    To attract mason bees, you also need a wet, muddy area. We have a very small stream and get a lot of mason bees.

  • @Autism_Forever
    @Autism_Forever 4 роки тому +2

    Great video! ♥ Purple basil is good to eat, too! :) I think the only problem I do NOT have in my garden is the pollinator problem :))))) I have one of only a couple yards in the neighborhood with still alive and thriving mature trees and bushes. Most others killed their trees or they died on their own. So, I have a TON of pollinators. I have all kinds of song birds, hummingbirds, huge butterflies (seriously, they are size of my hand), honey bees, solitary bees, wasps - you name it :) Blooming Persian silk tree has been particularly good for attracting pollinators. It was a tiny dead stump when I first moved in. As a matter of fact, I have a bit of a New York apartment crisis in my backyard, because there are so many pollinators and they barely have anywhere to live. Lately I have been building nesting compounds for them, so they finally can have their own pad, instead of sitting all together in that bush :))))

  • @jonathanreese5285
    @jonathanreese5285 4 роки тому +4

    Hey guys! Don’t forget to try a SWEET ALMOND BUSH. They attract a whole host of beneficial insects to your garden, up to (25) apparently. I have seen bees swarm this bush all year long, I live in Southwest Florida climate zone. They call the bush basically a beneficial insect power node attractor for your other flowers and garden. They also have a strong sweet almond, like the name, smell that is just amazing! Try one out, GL!

    • @NextLevelGardening
      @NextLevelGardening  4 роки тому +2

      Nice! Thanks👍👍

    • @jonathanreese5285
      @jonathanreese5285 4 роки тому +2

      California Garden TV you are very welcome, I wanted to add a photo of the bush but that’s not allowed on UA-cam comments sadly. I sent an instagram message of the bush with photo. 🤓

  • @mplslawnguy3389
    @mplslawnguy3389 3 роки тому +1

    If you plant the right stuff, they will come. If all you have growing is a vegetable garden with grass or pavement, don't expect to get many. They're going to go to places with lots of opportunities for flowers. Just make sure the flowers you have actually attract pollinators as a lot of cultivars they sell at garden centers are basically just for show. Ever since I planted milkweed, I've had monarchs every year. Not common milkweed, but butterfly weed and swamp milkweed. Common will pop up everywhere and I still want a somewhat contained landscape. Some people may want common though if they have the space and are ok with it spreading.

  • @katallen4021
    @katallen4021 4 роки тому +4

    I love the tabs at the bottom of the video. Brilliant! I

  • @roxxigirl1320
    @roxxigirl1320 4 роки тому +1

    Your channel popped up on my feed today. Boy! Am I glad it did. Thank you for sharing your knowledge of gardening. I am learning a lot. You get right to the facts and no unnecessary tales.

  • @jamiehenry3135
    @jamiehenry3135 4 роки тому +2

    Another intresting detail in regards to solitary bees compared to honey bees is that honey bees wind threshold is significantly lower then larger bumble and carpenter bees. On a brezzy day the honeybees are grounded on a weather hold and the larger bees are bringing home the bacon.

  • @youngbuck5009
    @youngbuck5009 4 роки тому +2

    Great video and thanks for your effort here on UA-cam! You’ve become one of the best gardening channels on the site!

  • @PopleBackyardFarm
    @PopleBackyardFarm 4 роки тому +1

    loved this.. believe it or not it was snowing here in New York all day yesterday so ready to get start planting!!!!

  • @quincyberman5629
    @quincyberman5629 4 роки тому +3

    I like the bee hotel idea. I am deep in a rice farming area so pollinators are scarce. I've been trying to attract more bees and toying with the idea of keeping bees. The hotel would give them a plce to stay but I wouldn't have to put in the time.

  • @melanieallen8980
    @melanieallen8980 2 роки тому

    yes in Australia I have noticed lots less bees & butterflies..Now I plant seeds constantly to encourage bees & beneficial bugs..It has definately increased their population.

  • @AllderHouse
    @AllderHouse 2 роки тому

    For propagating, I have used aloe Vera plant for rooting. I put in blender and then dip stem. Plant as usual w some humidity. Works wonders!! You should try this.

  • @digil4509
    @digil4509 4 роки тому +1

    Hi love your channel. When I saw the title for this episode I was excited to hear what you had to say. You are so right about the lack of bees. Hopefully all who subscribe and watch your channel realize how important not using pesticides in their gardens is to making sure we have bees around. The last few years I have been planting lots of flowers to attract bees, honey or solitary. In my garden they love lavender, cosmos, Borage and the big surprise was onion flowers. This year I let some of my onions go to seed and the bees go nuts for the flowets. I will now without exception plant extra onions just for the bees. I have a lemon and an avocado tree and the bees are all over them. I've also planted my zucchini plants close to my lavender just so the bees will be close by for pollination. Enjoy your channel very much!

  • @mrsjanhannah
    @mrsjanhannah 4 роки тому +3

    We have a Potager garden and get dozens of bees even early on. We have a wide variety of flowering plants from bulbs to sweet peas. We have poppies, marigolds, wild flower patch and fruit trees. We also get wasps and last season for the first time I watched a WASPI like insect eating aphids. It looked quite gruesome.

    • @nanarose3496
      @nanarose3496 4 роки тому +1

      I’m in NC and the wasps LOVE my front porch and back deck. My son-in-law is allergic to them so it causes problems having them there. Interesting about them eating aphids

  • @Tullinia
    @Tullinia 4 роки тому +2

    I planted a "pommier fleur" it's the apple tree that has tiny pink fruit the size of cherries, it has just blossomed and it is full of bees, butterflies and other insects

  • @katallen4021
    @katallen4021 4 роки тому +1

    I love the tabs at the bottom of the video. Brilliant!

  • @chrisridenour1040
    @chrisridenour1040 4 роки тому +2

    A buddy of ours (beekeeper) set 6 bee boxes 100yds from our garden.

  • @melviasheppard8466
    @melviasheppard8466 4 роки тому +1

    I have been taking my vegetables outside for 2 weeks now. Last week I noticed bees and 2 different kinds of butterflies. They seem to like jalapeno blooms. 😀

  • @bryandooley5453
    @bryandooley5453 4 роки тому +11

    You mentioned Cilantro. I would love it if you would do a video on it. I have never had much success with it but it is one of my favorite herbs along with Tarragon and Rosemary (which are easy).

    • @starlacarter
      @starlacarter 4 роки тому +1

      Please do a video.

    • @lt1136
      @lt1136 4 роки тому +2

      I agree, I never have much luck with cilantro and would like to learn how to grow it properly.

  • @mykhalable9433
    @mykhalable9433 4 роки тому +2

    Fewer and fewer of them, not less and less :)

  • @cherylmuriekes2523
    @cherylmuriekes2523 4 роки тому +1

    I have found that lupine really brings the bees in. They also seem to really like Chinese Houses. I have planted a wild flower garden (Organic native species) and that with all the blackberries I have; I seem to be the spot now in the neighborhood. I have not been successful growing milkweed. Would love to pull in more butterflies. Also don't forget to provide water for the bees. I use a shallow plant drain tray with some rocks for them to land on to get a drink. It works have watched them drinking from it.

  • @claygreen4723
    @claygreen4723 Рік тому

    I planted Black and Blue Salvia and it is absolutely covered in bees as long as it has flowers. It's invasive so I grow it in a container.

  • @mountaingran9623
    @mountaingran9623 4 роки тому +2

    My yard is filled with yellow cosmos and other plants that pollinators love. But the number of honey bees here is near zero. We do have butterflies, carpenter bees, and bumble bees. The butterflies absolutely love the cosmos.

  • @jacquelinetremblay4166
    @jacquelinetremblay4166 3 роки тому

    I loved the carpenter bees around my yard, quite fuzzy! All they wanna do is visit the flowers or take a rest on the warm fence post ♥️

  • @fireflyfarmletontheeno777
    @fireflyfarmletontheeno777 4 роки тому +1

    I have read that milkweed is toxic for ducks and therefore decided not to plant any as I have recently acquired 6 ducks. Going to try and plant it in the front yard where they won't have access!

  • @debbieweckler5239
    @debbieweckler5239 4 роки тому +1

    Your videos are always so helpful. Its farming time here in Wy, and the farmers outside of my pasture, always put up cutter bee stands, and load them with trays of bees. Its great for my garden too! I'll be listening in the morning to your talk. Thank you p.s. I think they are called cutter bees! Very small bees, and suposedily they don't sting. lol They have bit me before, like a fly. ouch.

  • @MrMickey98765
    @MrMickey98765 4 роки тому +14

    Oregano attract an unusual amount of, a verity of bees, like no other plant in my garden. Lo profile, no maintenance. Perennial in zone 6.

    • @luoboeguy
      @luoboeguy 3 роки тому

      My oregano is a perennial in zone 5 too!

  • @luchoportuano2829
    @luchoportuano2829 4 роки тому +1

    Your baby dog is so gorgeous !!!

  • @sharonstanley5054
    @sharonstanley5054 4 роки тому +42

    Plant herbs. The bees will come. Rosemary, oregano, thyme.

    • @johnpepin5373
      @johnpepin5373 3 роки тому

      I collect a certain wildflower seed to keep on hand. They produce a largish annual, that is covered with yellow flowers. Those flowers are always smothered in bees, humming birds and butterflies. They are immune to drought. Perhaps I will try planting one or two in my garden this year?

    • @sharonstanley5054
      @sharonstanley5054 3 роки тому

      That worked for me when I was lucky to see two bees together when I lived in Seattle. Bees don't like plants from the nursery because the plants are treated with systemic insecticides.

  • @nanarose3496
    @nanarose3496 4 роки тому +1

    Great info! I just ordered the bee box from your link. We have tons of wasps but fewer bees. Last year we did see some bees in the garden but our zucchini plant produced lots of flowers but only TWO zucchini. I’m going to rewatch and make notes to make sure I get plenty of pollenators Great job, Brian! See you tomorrow at 1 pm my time!

    • @NextLevelGardening
      @NextLevelGardening  4 роки тому +2

      Thank you. That's my experience too. Hope you like the bee house. See you tomorrow. Bit nervous...hope it all goes well😬😄

    • @nanarose3496
      @nanarose3496 4 роки тому +1

      California Garden TV It will, Brian. Just remember you are with friends for a chat and that we’ll be there because we want to visit with and learn from you. You’ll do great!!! 😉

  • @franzwaltenspuhl8892
    @franzwaltenspuhl8892 2 роки тому

    The birds have spread my lavender around my yard. I have plants coming up voluntarily 🙂. When the rosemary blooms is when I see the most bees in my yard.

  • @maggievenables9472
    @maggievenables9472 4 роки тому +2

    Here in Ontario Canada, I also have much fewer honey bees on my Heather shrub, like four or five bees at a time. Heather is the first thing to flower long before any spring bulbs, making this plant very important. In the past this plant would vibrate in mid April and you could hear the buzzing as much as 3 meters away. Very sad to see.

  • @1LindaJMacKay
    @1LindaJMacKay 3 роки тому

    How did I miss this video! I released 6 female Monarchs a week ago! 🦋 Have tons of Milkweed in the yard! 🦋

  • @susanriggs8896
    @susanriggs8896 4 роки тому +1

    I have and encourage borage in my garden. The bees are absolutely gaga over it! I get some of those nice big black bees in the garden along with the honey bees. Borage has a beautiful blue star-shaped flower, it resows itself, and it grows pretty much year round in my garden in the East SFBay just north of Berkeley. It looks like a squash seedling when it first comes up. It could almost be considered a "weed" because it's so prolific, but unwanted seedlings are easy to remove, though they don't transplant well. I make sure I have at least two plants in each of my raised beds, and I allow it to grow (that is encourage it) anywhere it "volunteers." sometimes I prune back some of the leaves so it doesn't shade out the veggies. Some of my raised beds are in the front yard, and passersby are constantly asking me about the beautiful blue flowers in amongst my veggies.

    • @greeneyedlady5580
      @greeneyedlady5580 2 роки тому

      Apparently, the wild honeybees have been eradicated in Oregon. it's been over 10 years since I've seen a bumblebee. Despite growing a lot of flowers among my veggies, they don't attract very many pollinators anymore.

    • @susanriggs8896
      @susanriggs8896 2 роки тому

      @@greeneyedlady5580 It's so sad to think of losing bumblebees! Give the borage a try. When I grew artichokes, I used to find half-a-dozen plus bees nestled in the flower head--a beautiful sight!

  • @jameschaisson7498
    @jameschaisson7498 4 роки тому +1

    i agree i thought about a bee hive but i live in town last year i used a blossom set

  • @tigerlilly1545
    @tigerlilly1545 2 роки тому

    I grew up in a rural area where there were plenty of wild muscadines, plum trees, tons of blueberries, strawberries you can smell even before you approach them, blackberries, fig trees. They are all gone. During that time there were bees and butterflies all over the place now when I go home you barely see a bee or butterfly.

  • @cindyhewatt3406
    @cindyhewatt3406 4 роки тому +1

    Another valuable video! I didn’t know you could propagate lavender from cuttings, I’m super excited! By the way, have you thought about raising a few hives of bees on your beautiful backyard? You should give it a try, sounds like you live in a warm enough place not to loss any when winter comes.

    • @NextLevelGardening
      @NextLevelGardening  4 роки тому +2

      Thank you. I would love to have bees but there's so much red tape with the city. Someday I might Wade through it.

  • @GingerPlease
    @GingerPlease 4 роки тому +2

    Nice video! So many do not take pollinators into account. I'm in process of making a border around my main garden plot and dedicate it to floral companion plants and native plants for pollinators :)

  • @susi-emily
    @susi-emily 2 роки тому

    I plant borage for two reasons. One, I do not have much room for "flowers", and two, as borage flowers refill their nectar every two minutes, considerably quicker than any other plant, it is the best draw for bees. I find I don't need any other plant to get bees into my little container garden.

  • @laurens9561
    @laurens9561 4 роки тому +1

    Hey,
    Thanks for putting out so much information already, it's good to see that these kind of videos are attracting viewers !!
    I'd like to piggyback on your video to talk about some more details that could help people with this topic. Some are important to actually be successful not only to attract them, but also to keep them alive and thriving.
    About butterflies, there are flowers they are attracted to for the nectar, but there are also their host plants, which could be and almost always are different.
    I live in Belgium and for us the most important host plants for butterflies are big nettles.
    You talked about the monarch and its host plant is indeed milkweed. So you will not just attract them, but they will set up in your garden (which could be what your meant, but that wasn't very clear).
    So for everyone, if you want to enjoy bringing up butterflies it's important to search for the host plants of the butterflies in your area. Plant them and enjoy the butterflies after a couple of years.
    In some cases these are considered weeds, though. In the case of giant nettles I put them in enclosures so they can't spread too much. I clip them before they seed as well.
    Actually, a lot of insects will be helped out by just leaving a piece of your garden wild.
    I usually dig around a bit in that place every few years to spread the seeds in fall, and to keep the most "spreading" herbs from dominating too much. And never, ever put compost in that place. The ground should be poor for many of these kinds of plants.
    When I first did this in the previous place I lived, after a few years my neighbours commented that they had never seen so much, and different kinds of butterflies.
    Some of them even traveled with me to the place I now live, probably they survived in the plants during winter when transplanting.
    About the insect hotels. It's best to keep more smaller bee hotels than one giant one.
    The reason is pests, fungi and wasps. There are wasps that can put eggs through the mud wall and they will eat the larvae.
    To keep the pests and fungi away, it's best to take out the sticks every year or every other year and clean them out.
    It's best to do this in spring when the bees have flown out. You'll have to check your bee-hotel to look for the timing when most of them are gone and before they fill it up again. If some holes stay closed, possibly they didn't make it.
    In this way you'll have a lot more mason bees, because fungi and pests will have less opportunity to spread, and wasps may get to a couple of sticks (or maybe all) in one place, but not at the other.
    Also, make sure the bee hotel is protected from rain in heavy winds. They prefer the opening facing south or south-west as well.
    Also, kindly ask your neighbours if they use chemicals in the garden and try to change their mind. I've been lucky with some understanding neighbours that listened to reason and were actually relieved that I didn't care about the weeds on the border between our properties. It's better for the plants, better for the insects, better for the birds, better for everyone, even the soil is a lot more happy and healthy being covered with weeds, rather than laying bare to the sun (not everything needs to be mulched !!!! ).
    This is my second year living here now and the beehotels are swarming with mason bees.
    It really works !!

    • @NextLevelGardening
      @NextLevelGardening  4 роки тому

      Thank you! Lots of good info.

    • @laurens9561
      @laurens9561 4 роки тому

      @@NextLevelGardening No, Thank you for spreading these ideas !! I'm very happy about people spreading good ideas to help the symbiosis between people and nature. Because right now we're being mostly parasitic. Maybe, in time, we can turn the situation around.
      Good luck in the future !

  • @glennnile7918
    @glennnile7918 2 роки тому

    Try "African blue basil" one of the two best pollinator attractors on the planet. It's a sterile hybrid of two other Basil plants. Must be started with a cutting. I never knew there were so many different pollinators. 20 to 30 different species visit this plant every day. Not just honey bees. It's entertaining to watch all the different ones that come to this fascinating plant.

  • @martinmacdonald2010
    @martinmacdonald2010 4 роки тому +1

    I go out of my way to encourage squash bees. I cant get milkweed to grow.. You want to make sure to plant a native not a South American milkweed.
    For bees I have a giant bottle brush and believe it or not, fava bean flowers made my yard buzz. My Lavender hardly gets any bees. Man, your shirt takes me way back! Thanks for the video!

  • @dustinbrandel59
    @dustinbrandel59 2 роки тому

    Bravo on the bee house. I been lookin up how to attract carpenter bees, and aint found squat.

  • @mattbarker4921
    @mattbarker4921 2 роки тому

    good to know I just started some milkweed this year

  • @QmeResort
    @QmeResort 4 роки тому

    Glad you're doing better...You look focused.

  • @gennyt.1306
    @gennyt.1306 3 роки тому

    Milkweed isn’t the only plant monarch butterflies eat. I’m from Hawai’i and we have Crown Flower plants that butterflies LOVE. Crown flower plants will be full of butterflies and covered with caterpillars.

  • @mrs.dirtdauber5384
    @mrs.dirtdauber5384 4 роки тому +8

    Monarch caterpillars will also eat dill. I always plant extra so that I have enough for pickling after the caterpillars are done with it. 😅

    • @DearReaderLaura
      @DearReaderLaura 4 роки тому +2

      Those are not monarch caterpillars; they are swallowtail caterpillars.

    • @mrs.dirtdauber5384
      @mrs.dirtdauber5384 4 роки тому

      Could be. They look nearly identical. We do have lots of monarchs in our garden though.

    • @DearReaderLaura
      @DearReaderLaura 4 роки тому +1

      @@mrs.dirtdauber5384 I did a double-take when I first saw one. Black swallowtails also like parsley, cilantro, and fennel.

    • @shirleyk623
      @shirleyk623 4 роки тому

      Monarch caterpillars only eat milkweed. The swallowtail caterpillars eat a lot of different crops as the others people have mentioned☺🦋🦋🦋🐛🐛🐛

  • @emilycartmell5017
    @emilycartmell5017 3 роки тому

    I live in the mtns of OR I’ve been here 3 years now... the first summer I was here there was a plethora of different varieties of bees it was almost too much sometimes to be outside and now this past summer there was hardly any bees at all. I’d also like to note that the first winter I spent here there was 6 ft of snow and this winter the most we’ve gotten is 10 inches..

  • @trfisher78
    @trfisher78 2 роки тому

    Last year, which was my first garden, I had one bumble bee. He was there every morning pollinating my cucumbers and eggplant. This year I haven't seen one bee type pollinator.

  • @PaullaWells
    @PaullaWells 4 роки тому

    I really like the idea of the butterflies. They have meaning to my family and me so they are well loved. Also, bees seem to hate me. They will literally stalk and chase me to attack me. Just a week ago I was held hostage in my garden by a red wasp that was seriously stalking my every movement. I barely got by and to the door when it just missed me and buzzed by my head. I know I need pollinators so I had just resigned myself to getting stung a bunch this summer, but now I realize, thanks to you, I can attract butterflies instead! Whoop whoop! Thank you so much for that idea!
    You did a great job setting the reminder. Be sure to look up how to start the live just in case. Most people don't use the reminder because they don't know how to get the live started. I am really looking forward to watching your first live and rooting you on. You will do well I am certain of it.

    • @NextLevelGardening
      @NextLevelGardening  4 роки тому +1

      Thank you. And yes it sounds like butterflies over bees for you.

    • @PaullaWells
      @PaullaWells 4 роки тому

      @@NextLevelGardening - For sure! ☺️

  • @earthprotected1157
    @earthprotected1157 4 роки тому

    I grow tree collards for the white moths too there’s a lime yellow colored on too. These moths will dance together an swirl through the air.

  • @mr.tidygarden
    @mr.tidygarden 4 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing dude great tips. New garden UA-camr from Ireland.

  • @debbielucas4009
    @debbielucas4009 3 роки тому

    I love your channel it teaches me a lot of things I need to know you're amazing thank you

  • @PTDoc
    @PTDoc 4 роки тому +1

    great video!! thank you for the reminder about mason, leafcutter and carpenter bees!! Looking forward to the live stream!! BTW, What did you name chickens?

  • @زهرة_الأوركيد
    @زهرة_الأوركيد 4 роки тому

    I am so happy for you. Your channel is growing so fast.🌷🌺🌼🌻

  • @lesliekendall5668
    @lesliekendall5668 4 роки тому +1

    What I'm going to do this year to bring more pollinators is plant indigenous and endemic perennials. Bees may like anything but butterflies can be picky.

  • @lyndaeggimann1100
    @lyndaeggimann1100 4 роки тому

    I AGREE. I grew up in SF.. and we had cocoons, butterflies, worms... then I moved to the country in No. Calif... but there were not as many. I live in Idaho now.. and I am a BeeKeeper.. but I have to BUY ladybugs, worms, and praying mantis.. and I very rarely see a butterfly. Talk to us.

  • @starlacarter
    @starlacarter 4 роки тому +1

    I live in Arkansas. I noticed the decline in bees last year. I am planning to plant all the the flowers I can.

  • @pjqziggy
    @pjqziggy 4 роки тому +12

    I grow oregano all over my garden because I've never seen so many bees once it is in flower.

  • @shugocharaikuto
    @shugocharaikuto 4 роки тому

    Dill and parsley are really good at attracting butterfly's I always plant lots of extra.

  • @norbsteuber6754
    @norbsteuber6754 4 роки тому

    If you are going to direct sow Milkweed put the seeds in a container in damp sand in the refrigerator for a month prior to sowing them.

  • @user-qc3ee4yl2k
    @user-qc3ee4yl2k 5 місяців тому

    I have a new build garden. Not a bee, butterfly or lady big last season. Planted creeping thyme last autumn- come summer, the thyme is alive with bees. Give it a try.

  • @kmcdpdj3084
    @kmcdpdj3084 4 роки тому

    I am really appreciating your videos. Your intro music is very nice , also ... Thank you!

  • @montecali619
    @montecali619 4 роки тому

    Wow I like how u have the up coming subjects at the bottom

  • @phonymontana4254
    @phonymontana4254 Рік тому

    Love your videos thank you so much