Janet’s Daily Pollinators for January

I’ve just completed the third month of my 2020-21 Covid winter project – another thirty of my favourite pollinators posted in photo stories on my Facebook and Instagram accounts.  Here’s their #janetsdailypollinator family photo!

I began on January 2nd (I took New Year’s Day off) with a continuation from December of the “damned yellow composites” or “DYCs” (yellow daisies that look frustratingly similar) that grow in my meadows at the cottage on Lake Muskoka north of Toronto.  It was cup plant’s turn (Silphium perfoliatum), complete with bumble bees and, yes, seed-stealing chipmunks.

On January 3rd, I profiled a steadfast old favourite: biennial blackeyed susan (Rudbeckia hirta) with a pearl crescent butterfly. It was the first wildflower I sowed at the cottage to hold the soil on the slope That first year, way back in 2004, I had thousands of yellow daisies. What a joyful summer that was. I celebrated it last winter in my musical Van Morrison blog, ‘Brown Eyed Girl(s)’.

The late summer native sweet blackeyed susan (Rudbeckia subtomentosa) was my yellow daisy for January 4th, with a tiny hoverfly aboard. Such an elegant perennial – my favourite of the entire clan.

Helianthus ‘Lemon Queen’ was my DYC for January 5th, featuring a honey bee.  I grow this tall hybrid in my front yard pollinator garden in Toronto and in my meadows on Lake Muskoka

Bumble bee queens love native blue false indigo (Baptisia australis), my pollinator plant for January 6th, aka Epiphany, or in the Greek Orthodox church, Theophany.  In fact, Baptisia comes from the same root as baptism or ‘bapto’ meaning to change by immersion – since Baptisia is a dye plant.   

Continuing in the same vein, January 7th is the Greek Feast Day of the Synaxis of Agios Ioannis, John the Baptist’s birthday, so I celebrated several species of St. John’s wort (Hypericum spp.) beginning with Bombus auricomis, the black-and-gold bumble bee on Hypericum frondosum.   I had never seen that bumble bee before, but that made sense because I photographed it in the amazing Mary Livingston Ripley garden in the Smithsonian gardens in Washington D.C.

Recognizing that January is a cold month, I hopped a virtual flight to Kenya and Los Angeles on January 8th, where I found lots of beautiful aloes with sunbirds (below), hummingbirds, mockingbirds and honey bees.  By the way, I wrote a long blog on my trip to the Los Angeles County Arboretum featuring so many aloes! Have a look.

January 9th saw me reporting on robberies – honey bees and carpenter bees carrying out nectar theft on the slender corollas of hostas in my garden.

On January 10th, I recalled a hike I took near Tucson where I found a cactus turret bee (Diadasia australis) rolling in the pollen of Engelmann’s prickly-pear cactus (Opuntia engelmannii).

Bird vetch, cow vetch or tufted vetch (Vicia cracca) may be a common weed, but bees love it, as I illustrated, below, on January 11th.  

You can grow roses and still host bees – but you have to choose species and cultivars that have exposed stamens so bees can gather pollen. That means forgoing the doubles that bees can’t use. On January 12th, I gave some examples, including the dog rose (R. canina), below.

On January 13th I celebrated the wonderful nectar-rich Sicilian honey lily (Allium siculum), also known as Nectaroscordum. Even rain-soaked red-belted bumble bees (Bombus rufocinctus) are unable to resist its charms!

Colourful zinnias, include Z. elegans ‘Zowie Yellow Flame’, below, hosting a monarch butterfly, were my pollinator choice for January 14th.

On January 15th, I recalled finding loads of honey bees foraging on the well-named “bee bee tree” or Korean evodia (Tetradium daniellii) at Burlington’s Royal Botanical Garden one August.

Common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) is well-known for its role hosting monarch butterfly caterpillars through their metamorphosis. I celebrated this native plant on January 16th. And if you didn’t read my summer 2019 saga of our little Monarch chrysalids Bella and Bianca, you can find it here. But be warned, it’s sad.

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January 17th saw me showing off the most beautiful pollen ever in the pollen sacs or “corbiculae” of my little honey bee foraging on crimson-pink Knautia macedonica.

The big, beautiful chalices of tulip tree (Liriodendron tulipifera), being pollinated by a big Eastern carpenter bee (Xylocopa virginica), below, was the subject of my January 18th post

The European woolcarder bee (Anthidium manicatum) is not my favourite insect. Males police their flower territories aggressively, chasing away native bees from the blossoms it likes, especially rusty foxglove (Digitalis ferruginea) below. That was my January 19th post.

On January 20th, I took a little trip to South Africa to enjoy native Cape honey bees (Apis mellifera capensis) on native calla lilies (Zantadeschia aethiopica), below. And I included a blog I wrote on Johannesburg artist William Kentridge’s fabulous garden.

The next day, January 21st, I travelled all the way to New Zealand to find non-native bumble bees (imported from the UK) on native hebes. One of my hebes, white-flowered H. salicifolia, was growing on the hillside overlooking the dock for our fantastic overnight cruise on Doubtful Sound in Fiordland, one of my best travel experiences ever.

Peaches! Who doesn’t love juicy peaches? On January 22nd I paid tribute to a hardy variety of this luscious fruit (Prunus persica ‘Reliance’), being pollinated by a honey bee, below. I even included my recipe for spicy peach-and-pepper relish.

I recalled a divine hike to the top of a North Carolina Blue Ridge mountain called Craggy Gardens on January 23rd. There I was lucky to find bumble bees and butterflies on the beautiful Catawba rhododendron or mountain rosebay (R. catawbiense).

Nectar-rich lindens, aka lime trees or basswoods (Tilia spp.), were my focus on January 24th. I also included the latest research on bumble bee death below these magnificent trees.

On January 25th I celebrated the beautiful, butterfly-friendly, annual Mexican daisy (Tithonia rotundifolia).

Persicaria amplexicaulis ‘Firedance’ with a bumble bee was my pin-up pollinator plant for January 26th.

It was a blue day on January 27th – blue for California lilac or Ceanothus, that is! And I told a little beekeeping story about hives on a hotel’s roof

Who doesn’t love old-fashioned hollyhocks (Alcea rosea)?  Bees love gathering pollen from those big, silky blossoms, as I demonstrated on January 28th.

Since he did a lot of experimentation with them, I cued up Charles Darwin on January 29th for my post on toadflax (Linaria vulgaris).  And I recalled a peek into the hives at baby bees at the University of Guelph Honey Bee Research Centre.

Luscious lupines – both wild lupine (Lupinus perennis), below, and Russell hybrid lupine (L. polyphyllus) starred in my post for January 30th – along with bumble bees, of course. And I couldn’t mention lupines without my blog about Miss Rumphius, the lupine lady.

In researching my post for January 31st, I finally learned the meaning of the common name of the tall prairie perennial Silphium laciniatum, i.e. “compass plant”. Yes, it’s the leaves. And because the finest compass plants I’ve ever seen were at Chicago’s Lurie Garden, I linked to my blog about that spectacular, Piet Oudolf-designed garden in Millennium Park.

And that’s it for January! Three months of my Covid winter project down, only two to go!

Janet’s Pollinators for December

We’re now in the new year and I can look back on December, my second social-media-month (Facebook and Instagram) of posting plants with bees, butterflies, moths or birds as #janetsdailypollinator entries to while away the months until spring.  I took a few days off for Christmas, but managed to find 25 pollination partnerships to celebrate.

And here they are:

On December 1st snow was falling outside my Toronto office this morning, so I thought it was be a good day to celebrate sunflowers.  as #janetsdailypollinator.  Bees love the big compound flowers of annual sunflower (Helianthus annuus), as you see with the trio of common Eastern bumble bees (Bombus impatiens) in my photo.   

December 2nd had me thinking about gaura with its long wiry stems and its new name Oenother lindheimeri aka Lindheimer’s beeblossom.  It was named after the German-born botanist Ferdinand Jacob Lindheimer (1801-1879), a political refugee who fled to the U.S. in 1834 and settled in New Braunfels, Texas on the banks of the Comal River where he collected plants and tried to start a botanical garden. Bees and wasps love gaura, like the potter wasp (Ancistrocerus) below.

Although I’ve never grown them (those big fleshy roots are very particular as to handling), I photograph hardy foxtail lilies (Eremurus) whenever I see them, my pollinator for December 3rd. And whenever I see them, there are always honey bees, below, or bumble bees working the masses of tiny flowers on the big spikes. Economy of scale works!

On December 4th,I honoured a lovely northeast native: winecups or purple prairie mallow (Callirhoe involucrata). I grew this from seed one year but it did not thrive, perhaps because of my acidic soil. I must try again – look at that happy honey bee!

The northeast native perennial anise hyssop (Agastache foeniculum) is a superb pollinator plant, attracting myriad butterflies and bees including the orange-belted bumble bees (Bombus ternarius), below. I celebrated it and related hybrids A. ‘Blue Fortune’ and A. ‘Blue Boa’ on December 5th.

On December 6th I featured the Virginia native whiteleaf leather flower(Clematis glaucophylla) with a big bumble bee foraging in its pretty flowers. That day, I also related the history of the hashtag # and how it works to aggregate posts on the internet.

My bird pollinators wanted equal time, so on December 7th I invited a female ruby-throated hummingbird (Archilochus colubris) foraging on the beautiful deep pink Salvia WENDY’S WISH (Salvia hybrid) to be my pollinator pin-up girl.

Of the big milkweed clan, the one that grows on Lake Muskoka’s shores is swamp milkweed (Asclepias incarnata). On December 8th, I included it and the white-flowered selection ‘Ice Ballet’ with photos of butterflies, like the monarch below, and myriad bees foraging on the small flowers.

On December 9th I shared a bumble bee foraging on sacred tobacco (Nicotiana rustica) in the Useful Plants Garden at the Montreal Botanical Garden.

Even though they have a new and tongue-trippy botanical name, asters are wonderful pollinator plants. On December 10th native New England aster (Symphyotrichum novae-angliae) was my daily selection, hosting the tiny pure green gold sweat bee (Augochlora pura)

Even if you love those big, blowsy double dahlias, be sure to plant some single dahlias (Dahlia spp.) for the bees. They adore them, as you can see from my photo of the brown-belted bumble bee (Bombus griseocollis) on Dahlia ‘Bishop of Oxford’ on December 11th!

My December 12th post recalled a lovely moment during my 2019 botanical tour of Greece, a visit to a heather-spangled hillside on the Mani peninsula where autumn heather (Erica manipuliflora) was attracting bees.  I came home with a jar of autumn heather honey!  Did you read my trip journal blog about this wonderful Greek tour with the Greek plantsman Liberto Dario (Eleftherios Dariotis)?

Very few perennials are as attractive to bees as the native mountain mints. My December 13th star was Virginia mountain mint (Pycnanthemum virginianum), photographed at the Legacy Prairie at Niagara Parks Botanical Garden.  I wrote a blog about this fabulous garden.

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On December 14th I honoured the European perennial masterwort (Astrantia spp.), which always has bees buzzing around it in early summer.

There are so many catmints – all wonderful pollinator lures. Thus my December 15th post featured several photos of low-maintenance catmints (Nepeta spp.), all hosting bumble bees, like the one below on Nepeta ‘Walker’s Low’, or honey bees.

Blanket flowers (Gaillardia spp.) derive their common name from their similarity to red and yellow Navajo blankets in the southwest regions where they are native perennials and annuals. All kinds of bees adore my December 16th pollinator plant, like the bumble bee and hoverfly foraging on Gaillardia x grandiflora, below.

You know there will always be loads of bees around garlic chives (Allium tuberosum), my December 17th entry. A little weedy, yes, but you can always cut the leaves to use in cooking, like the Chinese do!

I grow my December 18th  pollinator plant Culver’s root (Veronicastrum virginicum) at our cottage on Lake Muskoka, where there are always butterflies or bees on the small flowers up the spike. I especially love the light-purple cultivar ‘Lavendelturm’, but the native species itself is a superb plant, below with bumble bee.

Whether in the garden or a spiky cut flower that dries well, blue sea holly (Eryngium spp.) is a distinctive perennial that also attracts bees, like the carpenter bee (Xylocopa virginica) in my photo, which was my post for December 19th.

If you live in the northeast, you are familiar with the fuzzy red fruit clusters of staghorn sumac (Rhus typhina), my December 20th  pollinator plant. But that fruit – so nourishing for birds and wildlife in winter – would not be produced on the female shrubs without the bees and butterflies of summer foraging on the greenish-yellow flowers, like the white admiral butterfly (Limenitis arthemis) below.

As Christmas week dawned on December 21st, I celebrated the history of the poinsettia (Euphorbia pulcherrima). Alas, all I had in my photo files was a lonely little ant foraging on the yellow nectar glands, not the butterflies and bees that evolved with this holiday shrub in its native Mexico.

As the big day got a little closer, my mind was on the cranberries I like to buy from our local bogs in Muskoka. Thus on December 22nd my pollinator plant was cranberry (Vaccinium macrocarpon) with a honey bee. Oh! And I included my recipe for my annual Christmas dessert, apple-cranberry cheesecake tart.

With the Christmas fuss behind me, on December 29th I began a week-long series focusing on “DYCs” or “damned yellow composites” – yellow daisies that are confusing alike to those unfamiliar with variations among the hundreds out there, and all of which I grow in my meadows and naturalistic beds at the cottage. My first entry was heliopsis or false oxeye daisy (Heliopsis helianthoides), a rather aggressive native that I like, even though it always hosts red aphids. Fortunately, it attracts lots of pollinators as well, like the feather-legged scoliid wasp Campsomeris plumipes, below.

My second “DYC” on December 30th was a favourite yellow daisy for early summer, lanceleaf coreopsis (Coreopsis lanceolata), shown with a hoverfly and friend below. Easy, low-maintenance and a good seed provider for hungry birds too.

On New Year’s Eve, I finished my pollinators for the month with the willowy-stemmed grey-headed coneflower (Ratibida pinnata)

As a special treat to my nerdiest plant friends on Facebook during Christmas week, I created a special ‘botanagram’ puzzle, a word I coined back in 2014 for some particularly challenging online guessing-game fun. I even wrote a blog about my botanagrams. As for this one, I will save you the trouble of puzzling out the 2-word anagram based on the first letter of the genus name of the numbered plants, and provide the solution below the photo montage, which was solved on ‘the night before Christmas’ by Facebook pals in Seattle WA, Raleigh NC, London UK and Athens.

1 – Salix caprea with unequal cellophane bee (Colletes inaequalis)
2 – Echium wildprettii with honey bee (Apis mellifera)
3 – Aesculus parviflora with black swallowtail (Papilio polyxenes)
4 – Enkianthus campanulatus with red-belted bumble bee (Bombus rufocinctus)
5 – Helenium autumnale with honey bee (Apis mellifera)
6 – Cercis occidentalis with Anna’s hummingbird (Calypte anna)
7 – Verbena bonariensis with monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus)
8 – Scabiosa caucasica with brown-belted bumble bee (Bombus griseocollis)
9 – Rhododendron saluense with bumble bee (Bombus vosnesenskii)
10 – Iris fulva with honey bee (Apis mellifera)
11 – Magnolia macrophylla var. ashei with megachilid bee (Megachile)
12 – Tilia x euchlora with (Toxomerus marginatus)
 
SEAEHCVSRIMT  = CHRISTMAS EVE
 
6-Cercis occidentalis
5-Helenium autumnale
9-Rhododendron saluense
10-Iris fulva
8-Scabiosa caucasica
12-Tilia x euchlora
11-Magnolia macrophylla var. ashei
3-Aesculus parviflora
1-Salix caprea
 
4-Enkianthus campanulatus
7-Verbena bonariensis
2-Echium wildprettii

And that was a wrap for December!  Click here to read November’s pollinator posts.

A Month of Pollinators – November

With Covid making the winter ahead look rather long and devoid of travel and related fun, I’ve amused myself on my Facebook and Instagram accounts by posting a pollinator each and every day since November 1st. I might take a short break during Christmas week, but given that pollinator photography is one of my specialties, I’ve pledged to celebrate these little creatures throughout winter until March 31st, using the hashtag #janetsdailypollinator. Although my daily social media posts always feature a few extra photos showing either more insects on the plant I choose, or a few plant combinations incorporating the plant, or even a few items I bake with the fruit produced by the pollinator (!), I thought it would be fun to let my little pollinators star in a few blogs, too. 

So here is November, beginning with November 1st and a pair of Greek honey bees on the saffron crocus (Crocus sativus) that I photographed on my botany tour of Greece last autumn. I wrote a special blog about our saffron crocus day, too.

November 2nd – Bumble bee on fall monkshood (Aconitum carmichaelii ‘Arendsii’) in my Toronto garden.

November 3rd – Honey bee, hoverfly and bumble bee on fall snakeroot (Actaea simplex) in my Toronto garden. I wrote about this very late perennial combination in a blog from 2017.

November 4th – Squash bees (Peponapis pruninosa) in a ‘Marina di Chiogga’ squash at Montreal Botanical Garden.

November 5th – Monarch butterfly nectaring on butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) at my cottage on Lake Muskoka.

November 6th – Honey bee on forget-me-not (Myosotis sylvatica) at Toronto’s Spadina House.

November 7th – Bumble bees on showy goldenrod (Solidago speciosa) at my cottage on Lake Muskoka. If you want to read about goldenrods, have a look at my post “Sparing the ‘Rod, Spoiling the Bees” from 2014.

November 8th – Ruby-throated hummingbird on Crocosmia ‘Lucifer’ at my cottage on Lake Muskoka. Want to see a video of the hummingbird on this plant? Have a look at my YouTube channel video.

November 9th – Monarch butterflies on Rocky Mountain blazing star (Liatris ligulistylis) at my cottage on Lake Muskoka

November 10th – Hoverfly on oxeye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare) at my cottage on Lake Muskoka.

November 11th – Honey bee on Oriental poppy (Papaver orientale) at the University of Guelph Arboretum.

November 12th – Bumble bee on nodding onion (Allium cernuum) with Russian sage in the background at Toronto Botanical Garden.

November 13th – Megachile bee on hoary vervain (Verbena stricta) at my cottage on Lake Muskoka.

November 14th – Pure green gold sweat bee (Augochlora pura) on sacred basil or tulsi (Ocimum tenuiflorum) in a deck pot at my cottage on Lake Muskoka.

November 15th – Honey bees on banana flowers (Musa acuminata Cavendish Group) at Miami’s Fairchild Botanical Garden.

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November 16th – Bumble bee on Virginia bluebell (Mertensia virginica) at Toronto’s Casa Loma.

November 17th – Bumble bee on eggplant flower (Solanum melongena ‘Gretel’) at Montreal Botanical Garden.

November 18th – Honey bee in Digitalis ‘Illumination Flame’ at Chanticleer Garden in Wayne, Pennsylvania.

November 19th – Bumble bee on yellow cosmos (Cosmus sulphureus) at the Ottawa Experimental Farm.

November 20th – Painted lady butterfly on plum blossom (Prunus domestica) at Toronto’s Spadina House garden.

November 21st – Monarch butterfly on drumstick allium (A. sphaerocephalon) at Toronto Botanical Garden.

November 22nd – Bumble bee on yellowwood (Cladrastis kentukea) at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Toronto. I love the white flowers of June in the cemetery; have a look at my blog “June Whites” from 2017.

November 23rd – Honey bee on ‘Red Sprite’ winterberry (Ilex verticillata) at the High Line in New York City.

November 24th – Ruby-throated hummingbird on ‘Apricot Sprite’ (Agastache aurantiaca) at my cottage on Lake Muskoka.

November 25th – Bumble bee on fireweed (Chamaenerion angustifolium) at the Torrance Barrens in Muskoka.

November 26th – Bumble bee on foxglove penstemon (Penstemon digitalis) at my cottage on Lake Muskoka.

November 27th – Honey bee on pomegranate (Punica granatum) at the Tucson Botanical Garden.

November 28th – Bumble bee and honey bees on globe thistle (Echinops ritro ‘Veitch’s Blue’) at the Toronto Botanical Garden.

November 29th – Honey bee on apricot blossom (Prunus armeniaca ‘Tropic Gold’) at Seaside Gardens, Carpinteria, California.

November 30th – Monarch butterfly on New York ironweed (Vernonia noveboracensis) at my cottage on Lake Muskoka.

And that’s it for November’s little pollinators!  If you want to see my multi-photo posts with their associated anecdotes, join me on Facebook or on Instagram! See you later this December with the pollinator crew from the last month of 2020!

Pollinators & Essential Services

I’ve been meaning to write this blog for years, but it took a global pandemic – and the fact that this is National Pollinator Week – to spur me into action. Because in a pandemic we need essential workers, and on this planet there are no workers more essential than pollinators. Think of it: in all flowering plants not pollinated by wind (grasses and many trees are wind pollinated), bees, buterflies, moths, birds, beetles, ants and other insects are responsible for transferring pollen from a flower’s male anthers to the receptive female stigma, ensuring fertilization of the ovum, the creation of fruit and later the ultimate dissemination of seed. Without pollinators, the world as we know it would be as it was more than 135 million years ago: boring. No need for colour, since grasses and birches and pines don’t need to wear flashy hues to have the wind disperse the pollen the produce. No need for flower fragrance, since the wind doesn’t need to be lured to flowers like moths to a nocturnal species.  And wind pollination is so wasteful! Look at how many male white pine cones fall to the ground in the evolutionary effort to pollinate the receptive female cones. (This is my dock on Lake Muskoka north of Toronto, by the way).

No, insect pollination was a giant step forward, beginning with plants that looked vaguely like modern magnolias, likely fertilized by beetles. (I couldn’t find any beetles so substituted honey bees on Magnolia grandiflora, below).

Bees evolved initially from wasps. The earliest honey bee ancestors emerged in Asia roughly 120 million years ago. Bumble bees arrived on the scene between 30 and 40 million years ago.  Modern honey bees and bumble bees, like those below on globe thistle, are the descendants of an ancient lineage of insect pollinators

As gardeners, we sometimes forget that there was a time when the natural world did not revolve around us. It got along just fine without Homo sapiens. In fact, there are quite a few people who think earth fared much better without humans, but then consciousness and evolution have given us the ability to perceive our achievements and actions with feelings of pride tempered by a growing sense of guilt. Climate change, conservation, overpopulation – they are all serious issues today, but that’s not what I’m focusing on here. Instead, I’d like to write a little love letter to the workers in earth’s most essential essential service: pollinators.  Goodness knows I’ve spent enough time courting them over the past three decades and more.  Here’s one of my Toronto Sun columns from 1997.

And here’s a story I proposed and wrote on urban beekeeping for the now-shuttered Organic Gardening magazine in 2012.

Researching nectar- or pollen-rich flowers for beekeepers for that story and finding very little in current literature launched a multi-year focus on honey bees and their favourite plants. Out of it came a quite spectacular poster……

….. and the occasional magazine cover.

In time, I amassed such a large inventory of honey bee imagery (like the forget-me-not, below) that I decided to create an online photo library devoted just to them.  If you’d like to have a browse, it is located here.

I have written stories about beekeepers, including my friend Tom Morrisey in Orillia, Ontario, below. This was my blog on his late summer honey harvest at Lavender Hill Farm.

My beekeeping pal Janet Wilson out in British Columbia drove me to her hives in a blackberry thicket on a farm, and let me photograph her checking on the hives.

When I was on safari at Kicheche Camp in Laikipia, Kenya in 2016, I loved spending time with the camp’s beekeeper William Wanyika, and learning how he does his work.

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At Toronto Botanical Garden, I photographed the beehives and the student beekeepers….

….. and later that year I returned to photograph the honey harvest.

I enjoyed paying attention to nectar guides, the markings that plants have evolved to show pollinators exactly where to look for nectar and pollen. The European horse chestnut (Aesculus hippocastanum), below, is an excellent example. Flowers with fresh nectar exhibit a yellow blotch; as the markings darken from orange to red, the bee knows that the flowers are old and no longer yielding nectar.

But as much as I appreciate the work that honey bees do, I have always understood that in North America, European honey bees (Apis mellifera) are very much domestic agricultural animals. They may be feral in places warm enough for them to overwinter, but in much of the continent they must be “kept”. Wild bees, or native bees, on the other hand, have co-evolved with our North American flora. Many of them are adaptable to a number of different plant species; they’re called “generalists”. Here is a montage I made of native North American bees and butterflies on native North American plants.

Other bees are “specialists”, requiring the nectar or pollen from one, or just a few, types of plants.  The North American squash bee (Peponapis pruinosa) is one of those, spending its short life acquiring food from the flowers of native squash plants, like the one below.

On vacation in Arizona, I was interested in the specialist native Diadasia australis bees who forage solely on opuntia cacti, like this Engelmann’s prickly-pear (Opuntia engelmanii).

At home, I have come to know my local native vernal or spring bees, like the polyester bee (Colletes inaequalis), shown below on early-flowering willow (Salix).

But I’ve been bemused in the past few weeks by native bees paying no attention whatsoever to my native plants and instead finding their sources of carbohydrates and protein in the nectar and pollen of non-native plants, such as the bicoloured sweat bee Agapostemon virescens working the wine-red flowers of European knautia (Knautia macedonica) in my garden, below….

… and a plethora of native pollinators, including the Eastern tiger swallowtail, avidly foraging on my neighbour’s Chinese beauty bush, Kolkwitzia amabilis, below.  

But some plants don’t need pollinators. While I was videotaping the June plants above, the birds were squabbling noisily over the first ripening serviceberries (Amelanchier sp.) nearby. (I photographed the one below on the High Line one June.) I was curious that in all my years observing my serviceberries and their clouds of tiny blossoms, I haven’t seen any pollinators attending the plants. How could I have such an abundance of early summer fruit? Scientists have shown that several species of Amelanchier have evolved “apomixis”, bypassing sexual reproduction, meiosis and cell division entirely – thus no need for insect fertilization. In apomicts, the ovum in the flower divides parthenogenically.

I adore bumble bees (Bombus species), and I’ve spent years trying to identify the ones I see in my gardens and even the species I encounter during my travels. You probably won’t be surprised to learn that I have a large photo inventory of bumble bees online. Below is my favourite of all, the brown-belted bumble bee (Bombus griseocollis). Isn’t that the perfect name?

And I do have a soft spot for Toronto’s (un)official bee mascot, the bicoloured agapostemon (A. virescens), shown here foraging on purple coneflower in my garden.

Though many people dislike them for their wood-boring trait, particularly if it happens to their pergolas or sundecks, I love watching carpenter bees (Xylocopa virginica) using that strong tongue to bore into the corollas of certain flowers, like the Nicotiana mutabilis, below. Biologists call that “nectar robbery”, i.e. the bee is effectively bypassing the evolutionary pact between bee and pollinator to gain the reward without transferring pollen from one flower to another.

At the Toronto Botanical Garden, where I’ve contributed my photography as seasonal galleries,  I spent a few seasons tracking pollinators on the plants, and made a musical video to celebrate them.

My city garden in Toronto was designed as a pollinator garden, too. It contains both native and non-native plants. I’ve shown this video a few times in my blog, but here it is again throughout four seasons.

And at my cottage on Lake Muskoka, I look upon almost every plant in my meadows, garden beds and planters as a chance to invite bumble bees, solitary bees and hummingbirds to sup on the mostly native plants I provide for them. (Please note that the vernonia should be V. noveboracensis).

So to celebrate National Pollinator Week, I would like to encourage all of you to think about your relationship as gardeners to the natural world. Should your garden really be all about you and what you like? Or do you agree with me that we should also consider that….

A Garden for Wildlife in Texas

When the newspaper cartoonist and trailblazing conservationist Ding (Jay Norwood) Darling (1876-1962) established the National Wildlife Federation in 1936, he had conservation as his goal.  “Land, water and vegetation are just that dependent on one another. Without these three primary elements in natural balance, we can have neither fish nor game, wild flowers nor trees, labor nor capital, nor sustaining habitat for humans.”  Ruthie Burrus’s Austin garden meets those critera, and an NWF sign proclaims her intention for all visitors to see.

But it’s not really necessary to read the words on the sign, for you can discern Ruthie’s intent based on the masses of pollinator-friendly plants flanking the long driveway at its start near the road…..

…. and the painted lady butterfly nectaring on the mealycup sage (Salvia farinacea)…..

…. and the honey bee foraging on the blanket flower (Gaillardia pulchella)…..

…. and the cottage garden-style matrix of self-seeding, mostly native wildflowers and grasses.

For structure, Ruthie has used the “it plant” that we saw in almost every Austin garden, the beautiful whale’s tongue agave (A. ovatifolia).

Not every plant is native – brilliant, bee-friendly corn poppies (Papaver rhoeas) have been incorporated, and self-seed regularly.

But the Texas natives do attract their share of pollinators, including this beautiful pipevine swallowtail butterfly nectaring on Hesperaloe parviflora, or red yucca.

There was lovely pink evening primrose (Oenothera  speciosa)….

And Engelmann’s daisy (Engelmannia peristenia)…

And lemon beebalm  (Monarda citriodora…

And rock rose (Pavonia lasiopetala).

The curving driveway’s retaining wall is draped with bee-friendly rosemary.
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When we reached the top of the driveway, we were treated to a tamer garden surrounding the Burrus’s lovely limestone home.

Ruthie Burrus was waiting for us there, ready to tour us around.

But even here, the plant palette was chosen to attract pollinators, like the honey bee on Salvia guaranitica ‘Amistad’, below.

In the shade, surrounded by ferns, was a water trough fountain with a slow-trickling stream of water cascading to the plantings below, then recirculated.

This was Texas hill country, and the view st the back of the house over the pool to downtown Austin was spectacular.

I loved the outdoor living room, protected from Texas gullywashers by a roof, and featuring a fireplace for cool evenings.

Beautiful succulent designs filled pots and troughs outdoors.

Many homeowners are including woodburning pizza ovens in their landscapes these days, and Ruthie’s was beautifully landscaped with Phlomis and agaves.

Nearby was a sweet building that Ruthie calls her garden haus.

A large cistern — one of two on the property — gathers rainwater channelled to it via a system of drains. A pump then facilitates irrigation of the garden.

We were just leaving when I heard excited voices at the front of the house. Looking up, I saw a huge tarantula on the cool limestone wall.  At the risk of anthrpomorphizing a little, it seemed to be saying, “I’m a Texas native insect too, and there’s room for all of us here!”