Black Country Bugle

Bee kind to help maintain a positive buzz into autumn

Expert Jimmy Doherty on how gardeners can aid pollinator­s survival through the cooler months. By Hannah Stephenson

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If you’ve spotted bees in your garden during sunny days in autumn, safe to say they are still foraging for nectar to see them through winter.

“My hive is still active,” says farmer and TV presenter Jimmy Doherty, conservati­on expert for Rowse Honey. “While there is sun and flowers, there are bees around.”

As part of Rowse’s Hives For Lives initiative­s (rowsehoney.co.uk/hivesfor-lives) to protect bees, Jimmy is supporting the brand’s partnershi­p with Blenheim Estate – a five-year conservati­on project which will see more than 50 acres of wildflower seeds sown throughout the estate and 124 miles of hedgerows to replenish nectar sources and create new habitats for pollinator­s.

So, how can gardeners do their bit to help bees this season?

“It’s not just our domestic bees but our wild bee population­s and all our pollinator­s we need to look out for,” says Jimmy.

Only the young queens of bumblebees live over the winter (old bumblebee colonies die while the newly-mated queen hibernates). Honeybees need to collect enough nectar to feed and maintain the colony throughout the winter, he explains.

“As it gets colder, honeybees won’t be going out to forage and they rely on stored food they have collected over the season. With bumblebees, the young queens will hibernate, the workers will die off but they still need to collect food [first], so that the queen has enough energy to get through winter.

“The most important thing for bees is the continuati­on of food throughout the year. What we can do

as we come into autumn is also important. There are still lots of insects flying around and they all need our help,” he adds.

Jimmy offers the following tips to help bees as autumn progresses...

Plant ivy

Ivy is so important. I was walking down the lane the other day and the ivy was in full bloom, buzzing with bees and hoverflies and also wasps.

Ivy is a great giver at this time of year and the honey produced from that nectar of ivy is dark and rich.

Choose long-flowering species

Think about things like verbena, asters, dahlias and sedums, as well as honeysuckl­e.

Select open flowered varieties

When you are choosing varieties which are beneficial to insects, open flowered types are a must so that the nectar can be easily accessed.

Often, flower breeders will breed for beauty, not for nectar, so you get these amazing, beautiful flowers with lots of petals folded on to themselves, but the bee can’t get to the nectar because there are so many petals to get through.

Ornate, convoluted roses aren’t that valuable to pollinatin­g insects, whereas things like buddleia or verbena, where all the florets are very apparent, add a great deal of value.

If you have enough space, create areas of wildflower­s and hedgerows. Early spring-flowering plants such as hawthorn are also very important for bees and other insects.

Create hibernatin­g areas

Having hibernatin­g areas is important. Honeybees don’t need that much attention because they are often looked after by a beekeeper, or will have their food sources if they are wild. But hibernatin­g insects like rough areas, such as tall grasses and log piles. Don’t be tempted to clean out your shed in the winter, because butterflie­s hibernate there.

Avoid pesticides

Try not to use any pesticides because that can have a lethal effect – it may kill them instantly – or a sub lethal effect, where you may spray a plant which the bee feeds from, which can make it become disorienta­ted. It may not be able to find its way back to the hive or forage properly.

 ?? ?? HIVE MIND: Jimmy Doherty is urging us to support bee population­s
HIVE MIND: Jimmy Doherty is urging us to support bee population­s
 ?? ?? Bees stock up on pollen for winter
Bees stock up on pollen for winter
 ?? ?? TASTY: Ivy is a great food source
TASTY: Ivy is a great food source
 ?? ?? COSY: Create a bee hotel
COSY: Create a bee hotel

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