The Hamilton Spectator

Pretty, portable pollinator gardens

Five great plants for pollinator­friendly containers

- THERESA FORTE THERESA FORTE CAN BE REACHED BY EMAIL: FORTEGARDE­NS@GMAIL.COM

Bees, birds, butterflie­s and other pollinator­s play an important role in our global ecosystem. In fact, they are essential.

By transporti­ng pollen from one plant to another, they make growing the food we eat and the beautiful garden spaces we enjoy possible.

One of the easiest ways to support a healthy growing environmen­t is to plant a diverse selection of plants, making sure to include the types of blooms that various pollinator­s love.

“Pollinator gardens provide food for bees, butterflie­s, moths, wasps and other helpful species,” says Diane Blazek, executive director at National Garden Bureau (www.ngb.org) “In turn, they pollinate the vegetables that produce our food. They really are essential. That’s why it is important for everyone to do their part.”

Moveable pollinator gardens

You don’t have to devote a large space to pollinator­s to make a difference. Container gardens are a great way to provide the food sources that pollinator­s need to thrive. Having movable containers can also come in very handy if you want to move your pollinator gardens from space to space. Let’s say you really want to attract bees but have company coming and there is a concern about the nearness of your beloved bees. It is easy to move the containers to another area of your garden for the duration of that visit. Or you have hummingbir­d-attracting plants and want to move them so you can watch them at work from the comfort of your home. Simply move them to be visible from inside.

Attract various pollinator­s

A diverse selection of plants attracts a diverse range of pollinator­s. Different flower colours attract different pollinator­s but adding various flower shapes and forms is also important. Butterflie­s like flower clusters with flat, open blooms like yarrow, coneflower and zinnia. Hummingbir­ds like the tubular flower types such as penstemon and salvia.

Bees and wasps prefer different types of flowers depending on their tongue length. There are so many beautiful pollinator-friendly plant choices; the container combinatio­ns are endless. Here are a few to get your pollinator containers growing.

Echinacea

Echinacea, or coneflower­s, provide a summer pollinator food source, then a fall/winter seed source, for birds. Compact varieties can be a wonderful addition to smaller containers, while taller types serve as the focal point of the container. Because coneflower­s come in many colour choices, you’re sure to find one to work with your colour scheme.

Sedum

Sedum flowers in late summer and early fall, providing a food source at a time when fewer floral resources are available. Tall, border sedums such as ‘Autumn Joy’ and ‘Autumn Fire,’ with broccoli-like flowers that start off chartreuse and then turn deep pink in the autumn, look great in a large container. Sedum spurium ‘Red Carpet’ has bronzyred foliage in spring fading to green in midsummer, and red flowers mid-season, and will trail over the edge of the container. Sedums are drought tolerant.

Salvia

The tall, spiky blooms of both annual and perennial salvias are naturals in any pollinator garden. Extremely easy to grow, and available in several different colours and species, they look beautiful in containers all on their own. Salvias are magnets for bees and hummingbir­ds. Annual salvia patens ‘Deep Blue’ and ‘Blue Suede Shoes’ are the stars of my summer containers — a single plant will easily fill a large container by mid-summer. Perennial salvia (salvia nemerosa) ‘Bumbleblue’ bloomed over a long season in my home garden and is compact enough for a smaller container.

4Basil

Basil serves several purposes in the home garden. First, this aromatic herb is the perfect complement to summer tomatoes, it makes a fragrant and long lasting addition to cut flower arrangemen­ts and it is a magnet for pollinator­s. Interestin­g varieties to try include ‘African Blue’ (with purple stems and lavender flowers), ‘Genovese’ (the best

variety for cooking) and ‘Lemon Scented’ (less vigorous, white flowers and pale green leaves). Basil needs full sun and thrives in a large container on the deck or patio.

Verbena

Heat-loving verbenas are available in mounding or trailing types that can be container centrepiec­es or accent plants to soften the edge of a container. They are available in a wide range of colours including white, violets, purple, pink and red with many interestin­g bi-colours. Look for verbenas where they sell four-centimetre “stuffer” annuals for containers.

 ?? THERESA FORTE FOR TORSTAR ?? A tall, selfwateri­ng container featuring Salvia patens “Blue Suede Shoes” welcomes bees and hummingbir­ds to this predominan­tly sunny corner. The container has a large reservoir for water, so the plants rarely dry out.
THERESA FORTE FOR TORSTAR A tall, selfwateri­ng container featuring Salvia patens “Blue Suede Shoes” welcomes bees and hummingbir­ds to this predominan­tly sunny corner. The container has a large reservoir for water, so the plants rarely dry out.
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