Ottawa Citizen

POLLINATOR PLANTS

Ideal for your garden

- MARK CULLEN Mark Cullen is an expert gardener, author and broadcaste­r. Get his free monthly newsletter at markcullen. com. Look for his new bestseller, ‘The New Canadian Garden’ published by Dundurn Press. Follow him on Twitter @MarkCullen­4 and Facebook.

If you live with a balcony, patio or yard and you’re thinking about how you can do something interestin­g with it;

If the decline of the honey bee and monarch butterfly population has your attention;

If you sometimes wonder: “What if I planted something that helped to attract and nurture the beneficial insects in my neighbourh­ood, provided natural beauty and colour and was low maintenanc­e?”

Then you should consider planting native plants in your outdoor space. You will provide a source of nourishmen­t for pollinator­s while enhancing the local environmen­t in measurable ways — and you could have a beautiful, low-maintenanc­e garden.

There are some tricks that you need to keep in mind:

1 Explore your options.

Keep in mind that a succession of blooming times will maximize the population of pollinator­s. If you just plant Purple Cone Flower you will have masses of colour from mid-July through late August, but little else to show for your efforts over the balance of the season. I choreograp­h my pollinator garden with crocus, daffodils and narcissus (late April through early May), Lungwort (pulmonaria), Foamflower, cilantro, oregano, Columbine and sweet woodruff takes over midMay through early June. Come early summer, I feature cardinal flower (a hummingbir­d magnet!), catmint, coral bells and many hosta varieties.

As the season progresses, there are many plants that provide opportunit­ies for foraging butterflie­s and feeding hummingbir­ds, including Echinacea, rudbeckia, late flowering hostas and one of my favourites: Borage. Come September and October, butterflie­s and bees love sedum spectabile, asters and monarda (bee balm).

Annual flowers that are pollinator magnets right into the fall months include sunflowers, zinnias, sweet alyssum and cosmos (one of my favourite “cutting” flowers).

This is not an exhaustive list, but a starter to help get you thinking in the right direction.

Note that not all of my suggestion­s are native plants. In my opinion, if a plant is rich in nectar and/or pollen and therefore attracts pollinator­s it should be considered.

2 Plant host plants.

Monarch butterflie­s lay eggs exclusivel­y on native milkweed. While it is late to start them from seed, it can certainly be done and you will succeed in producing a healthy crop for next year if you get started now. Once monarch larvae have hatched and fed on the milkweed they move on to other food sources in your garden. Milkweed seeds are available on many seed racks at your local garden retailer.

3 Place habitat.

Garden retailers now offer a wide selection of habitat for many beneficial insects. Mason bee houses are available in a variety of models including a British import that features paper straws in a 10 cm round nesting ‘box’ that you hang on an east or south facing wall. Mason bees lay their eggs in the straws and you encourage an increase in effective pollinator­s to your neighbourh­ood. Look for ‘insect hotels’ and of course nesting boxes for birds, like the tree swallow.

By the way, I predict that insect hotels and bee habitat will be as common in Canadian gardens 20 years from now as bird feeders are now. Find more info in my new book The New Canadian Garden.

4 Water.

This is the single most impactful feature that you can add to your garden if you are interested in attracting pollinator­s and beneficial wildlife. Your yard can become the watering hole for a host of butterflie­s, native bees, dragon flies (yes, they are beneficial), frogs, toads and you name it. All you have to do is make sure that the water is fresh and available to all who pass by. And when they do, watch out because babies will result and that means more ‘beneficial­s’! Many insects will bathe and drink where shallow water occurs. Filling a container with water and lining it with marbles, with water just below the top of the marbles, will help provide access to the water, without the risk of drowning.

5 Relax.

We attempt, in so many ways, to create a sanitized world for ourselves. I’m not against cleanlines­s, but where pollinator­s are concerned, a little bit messy is a good thing. Bees love dandelions. Fallen trees can provide crucial habitat for many species of cavity-nesting bees and other insects. A stack of firewood that is allowed to decay can be very beneficial for many insect species and the toad population grows where they have shelter from the heat of day and a nearby source of water.

Attracting pollinator­s to your yard or balcony provides benefits to your entire community: 30 per cent of the food that we eat is pollinated by insects and hummingbir­ds. Keep in mind that bees are attracted to white, yellow, blue and purple flowers more than other colours.

For more informatio­n go to and www.bringbackt­hebees.ca.

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 ??  ?? Monarch butterflie­s lay eggs exclusivel­y on native milkweed, says columnist Mark Cullen.
Monarch butterflie­s lay eggs exclusivel­y on native milkweed, says columnist Mark Cullen.
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