How to Plant an Excellent Pollinator Garden - Gardening - PlantSnap (2024)

Whether you think of the charismatic fuzz of a bumblebee, the thrum of a hummingbird, or delectable treats from honeybees, the approximately 200,000 species of pollinators come in all shapes and sizes, and all have different habitat needs. That’s where a pollinator garden comes into play. Growing plants that provide nectar and pollen is one of the best ways to support pollinator species.

What Is a Pollinator Garden, and Why Does It Matter?

A pollinator garden attracts the critters that pollinate flowering plants. As a quick review, pollinators are animals that support plant reproduction by transferring pollen between flowers. Because of pollination, new seeds develop and new generations of plants can grow. About three-quarters of the world’s plants rely on pollinators, including over 30% of crops. In other words, you have pollinators to thank for one in every three bites of food you eat! Along with playing a critical role in Earth’s ecosystems, pollinators are responsible for keeping a diversity of tastes and nutrients in our meals. Between disease and habitat loss, pollinators around the world are facing declines in population. Planting your own pollinator garden can help reverse these declines. By growing diverse plants to support the equivalent diversity of pollinators, we keep both delicious food on our plates and our local ecosystems thriving.

How to Plant an Excellent Pollinator Garden - Gardening - PlantSnap (1)

Planting a pollinator garden provides resources to a variety of pollinator species.

How to Plant a Pollinator Garden

As you start building your pollinator garden, there are a few key things to keep in mind. Beyond these tips, the design of your garden is up to you! Follow along to learn which plants to grow, when to grow them, and other ways you can spruce up your pollinator habitat.

Step 1: Choose the Right Spot

All About the Sun

Though flowering plants can grow in both sun and shade, the target is attracting pollinators. Insects rely on the temperature of their environment to regulate their body temperature. In warmer areas, insect pollinators have more energy to eat, find mates, care for their nests, and pollinate! In cooler spots, pollinators will be less active. Don’t be discouraged if you don’t get much sunshine – a shady pollinator garden is better than nothing. But if possible, plant your pollinator garden in a sunny spot.

Big or Tiny

Whether you are a farmer with acres of land or live in a tiny apartment, you can plant a pollinator garden! There are plenty of resources for designing pollinator gardens that fill up larger spaces, including this aesthetic one that emulates hexagonal honeycomb. With more space, you can provide extra resources for pollinators to create a more inclusive habitat. Find more tips on providing nesting and resting habitat below.

If space is the limiting factor, the Pollinator Partnership created an easy way to design window box pollinator gardens. This tool provides guidance on plants that attract local pollinators along with ones that flourish in a window box.

Step 2: Native Plants

Native Bees = Native Plants

While we often think of honey bees when prompted with ‘pollinator,’ they were brought across the Atlantic in the early 17th century by European settlers who wanted to continue beekeeping. North America boasts about 4,000 native bee species, not even counting the butterflies, beetles, flies, birds, and small mammals that pollinate! Often, only these native species are able to pollinate native plants and are two to three times more efficient than honey bees. In fact, squash, tomatoes, apples, and blueberries can only be pollinated by native bee species.

However, that’s not to say honey bees don’t play an important role. As domesticated animals, beekeepers often ‘follow the bloom’ as they take their hives on the road, traveling to farms and orchards that need their pollination services. Additionally, our tea and toast would be much less appealing without the sticky golden nectar we can harvest from them.

However, in the words of Mace Vaughan, the co-director of the Pollinator Program at the Xerces Society, “Keeping honey bees for pollinator conservation is like keeping chickens for bird conservation.” With most of the attention on pollinators being directed at honey bee conservation, the native species often go unnoticed. When designing your pollinator garden, planting a diversity of native plants will ensure that the native bees, butterflies, and other pollinators have the resources they need to thrive.

What to Plant

  • Find plants native to your region. Use this helpful guide from pollinator partnership to inform your plant choices for your pollinator garden. To learn more, just enter your zip code, and receive a free PDF with a guide to the local pollinators in your region, which plants to grow, and when to grow them.
  • Inspire yourself from the plants you see. Use a plant identification app to recreate a pollinator garden with the plants you see around your home.
  • Plant a variety of shapes and sizes. Different species of pollinators prefer different colors, patterns, shapes, and sizes of blooms. The table below provides some general guidance on what flower attributes will attract different types of pollinators.
PollinatorFlower ColorOther tips
BeesBlue & purplePlant flowers with Bilateral Symmetry
ButterfliesYellow, orange, pink, & redPlant host plants for the caterpillars
FliesPale, dull brownsPlants flowers that are funnel-shaped
BeetlesWhitePlant fragrant flowers.
BatsWhitePlant fragrant, night-blooming flowers.
MothsWhitePlant fragrant, night-blooming flowers.
HummingbirdsRed, pink & fuchsiaPlant tube-shaped flowers

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Red tubular flowers attract hummingbirds.

  • Keep flowers blooming. Different pollinator species are more active at different times of the year. Plant flowers in your pollinator garden with a variety of bloom times. Consequently, this practice will maximize the number of pollinators you can support.
  • Plant in groups. Pollinators find plants more easily if they grow in groups with similar colors. Cluster a few plants of the same species close together and section your garden into color groups.

What Not to Include

  • Avoid hybrid plants. Plants that are bred to grow more appealing flowers for the human eye often sacrifice nectar and pollen resources that support pollinators.
  • Avoid pesticides. Pesticides can be extremely harmful to pollinators, especially for bees and caterpillars. If you must use pesticides, read the labels carefully to find one that is less toxic like the biological insecticide Bacillus thuringiensis.

Step 3: Beyond the Flowers

Pollinator Habitat

In addition to growing flowers that provide food for pollinators, you can spruce up your garden with other features that support pollinators’ entire life cycles.

  • Leave an area with downed tree limbs or brush to serve as nesting habitat for native bees.
  • Grow host plants for butterfly caterpillars.
  • Placing rocks in sunny spots give pollinators warm places to rest and re-energize.
  • Provide water, either a pool or drip, for pollinators to drink and collect minerals they need for reproduction.

Not only will a pollinator garden attract and support native pollinator species, but the benefits carry outward and upward. Pollinator gardens create habitats for predator invertebrates (like spiders) that will help control yard pests. Entire ecosystems benefit from pollinator gardens because they provide food for native bird species, filter stormwater, and restore topsoil. Your backyard can become a haven for all types of wildlife!

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Building a native bee hotel in your pollinator garden supports bees’ entire lifecycles.

Build a Bee Hotel

If you want to really go above and beyond with your pollinator garden, build a native bee hotel. Because most native bees are solitary bee species, they don’t live in social colonies like honey bees. Instead, they build their nests underground, in trees, and in fallen logs. Consequently, building a native bee house increases pollinator habitat by providing shelter and nesting areas. In addition, they are pretty inexpensive and simple to build. Modern Farmer and the Honey Bee Conservancy provide some great tips to get started on a DIY bee hotel.

To sum up, building a pollinator garden can be as simple as planting a few flowers in a window box or as grand as creating an entire ecosystem in your backyard. Climate change, disease, and habitat loss threaten pollinator survival. Growing your own pollinator garden can help provide these hard-working species the resources they need to survive.

Have you ever grown your own pollinator garden? How did it go? Let us know about your pollinator garden experience in the comments below!

How to Plant an Excellent Pollinator Garden - Gardening - PlantSnap (2024)

FAQs

How do you layout a pollinator garden? ›

Planting pollinator plants in a raised bed, containers, and flower pots is a great ways to create extra planting space for pollinator plants. To make the most of a small space, plant in layers from tall to small: Grow tall plants like Sunflowers in the back. Grow mid-height flowers like Zinnias or Cosmos in the middle.

What time of year should I plant my pollinator garden? ›

If you're using seeds, plan on dispersing them the fall or late winter ahead of your summer growing season. This gives the seeds time to germinate. Nursery-started plants cost more, but will generally give you a quick return on your investment and bring pollinators into your yard during the same growing season.

How do you prepare ground for pollinator garden? ›

Till soil. Rake out remaining vegetation and roots to prevent them from re-growing. Mulch after planting (recommended). If considerable weed pressure is anticipated, additional tilling may be required to eliminate weeds that may germinate from the existing seed- bank or grow from roots remaining in the soil.

Should you mulch a pollinator garden? ›

While not good for ground-nesting pollinators, mulch does help retain soil moisture, stave off weeds, and prevent soil erosion, so no need to forgo it entirely. Instead, utilize pollinator-friendly mulching practices! Wait to mulch until the start of summer to give ground-nesting pollinators time to emerge.

What is the bees' most favorite flower? ›

1. Bee balm (Monarda spp.) This plant is called “bee balm” because it was once used to treat bee stings, but bees really are obsessed with the flowers. There are a variety of plants in the bee balm family that are native to North Carolina.

How do you plant a pollinator bed? ›

7 Steps to Create a Pollinator Garden
  1. Research Local Pollinators. Every area has its native pollinators, and it's best to choose plants designed for your region. ...
  2. Choose an Appropriate Garden Site. ...
  3. Select Native Plants. ...
  4. Prepare the Soil. ...
  5. Provide Water Sources. ...
  6. Maintain and Monitor the Garden. ...
  7. Keep Going. ...
  8. Aesthetic Appeal.
Aug 2, 2023

Do pollinator gardens need full sun? ›

Typically insects prefer visiting a sunny or partially sunny garden, but many pollinator friendly plants love shade, as well, so whatever you got, just work with it.

Should I mow my pollinator garden? ›

To reduce harm to insects, we advise mowing in the fall or winter when flowers are not in bloom. Mowing a mosaic of patches over several years, which no single area mowed more than once a year, also is helpful.

How to maintain a pollinator garden? ›

Follow these simple steps to create a pollinator-friendly landscape around your home or workplace.
  1. Photo by Beatriz Moisset, 2006. ...
  2. Avoid modern hybrid flowers, especially those with "doubled" flowers. ...
  3. Eliminate pesticides whenever possible. ...
  4. Include larval host plants in your landscape. ...
  5. Build a bee box. (

How to keep weeds out of a pollinator garden? ›

Mulch, but give plants some breathing room around their base. A generous layer of chipped bark, leaves and wood can suppress weeds and retain water in the soil (but remember to leave some bare soil for your local ground-nesting bees!)

How big should a pollinator garden be? ›

A Pollinator Garden Can Vary in Size.

It can be a decorative planter with a mix of a few native flowers and annuals, a small perennial flower bed, a vegetable garden interspersed with flowers, or it can be an entire yard. Start small as you can always expand the garden later as time, budget and space allows.

Do ground bees like mulch? ›

Another compromise is to use compost, leaf litter, and plant debris from your wildflower gardens, rather than wood mulch. Compared to wood mulch, a layer of leaf litter or other loose mulch allows ground-nesting bees easier access to their nest entrances.

What flowers do not like mulch? ›

Some of the worst effected plants are grassy plants (iris, daylilies, liriope, etc.), Indian Hawthorn, Azaleas and Loropetalum. Over mulching is one of the most costly and common mistake people make. Landscapers are the worst about over mulching…

How often should I water pollinator plants? ›

It's much better to water them only when they need it (or 1" rain every 2-4 days), instead of watering them every other day and making them too wet for too long. If they get too much water the roots don't grow outwards to find water, or worse, they start to rot.

What is the best mulch for a butterfly garden? ›

Use by-product or alternative mulches such as pine bark, eucalyptus, melaleuca, or utility mulch. FFL does not recommend the use of cypress mulch, as its origins may be difficult to determine. Avoid mulching over the root ball.

How do you draw pollinators to your garden? ›

Bees prefer white, yellow and blue blooms. Birds like red, orange and white. Bright, vivid colors, including red, yellow and purple, draw butterflies. Butterflies and bees favor flat, open blooms with big petals for easy landings and short nectar tubes.

What is a good size for a pollinator garden? ›

Pollinator Garden Size

The Natural Resources Conservation Service suggests an area of at least half an acre up to 2 acres for beneficial insectaries and habitat, but not many urbanites have that kind of space. They also suggest that we plant a single species in clusters of 25 square feet.

How do you cross pollinate house plants? ›

Method #1 – use a tool (like perhaps a small brush) to take pollen from the male flower and deposit it on the stigma of a female flower. I discovered that a woman's eyeliner brush that you can pick up at any drugstore tends to work quite well. Many people love to use an electric toothbrush as well.

What are 3 steps to pollinator success? ›

Additional Tips
  1. Create areas of shade and sun that shield pollinators from the wind.
  2. Choose organic compost instead of commercial fertilizers.
  3. Avoid insecticides & pesticides!
  4. Resist the urge to disturb your newly-created pollinator garden.

References

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