Plenty of plants for pollinators too, some like the perennial wallflower "Bowles Mauve" and the echium "Blue Bedder" have been flowering non-stop all summer, some like catmint, bladder campion and golden marguerite are flowering for a second time, whilst I'm getting another crop of flowers from a second sowing of phacelia. And of course others like helianthus, sedum, liatris and eupatorium save their glory for this time of year and are flowering for the first time.
In the meadow grass in the orchard the yellow of ragwort and blue of tufted vetch is giving way to the purple of common knapweed. A time of abundance for both me and the creatures with whom I share this little piece of planet earth.
Here's the pics:
Cosmos coming to the fore in the pictorial meadow mix.
Didiscus: I trialed this for the first time this year but it's been a disappointment, attracting very few pollinators and also being good at falling over in the wind. One I'll probably not bother with again.
Agastache: at the other end of the scale one of the very best plants for bees.
Now that I'm getting a handle on which are the best plants for bees and butterflies I'm starting to think about combinations - what looks good together - to plan for future years. Here helenium, fading poppy stalks and borage with aster in the foreground.
Agastache in the foreground with echinacia against the woody stems of a dying wallflower "Bowles Mauve".
Meadow grass and wild flowers.
Plot in the morning.
Greenbottle fly on aster.
Hoverfly on helianthus.
Large white on verbena.
Tree bumblebee on scabious.
Common knapweed in the meadow grass.
Potentilla and bladder campion make a nice combination.
Tree bumblebee on agastache.
A treat at this time of year is seeing the sedum flowers change colour as they slowly open.
A late bumblebee on dahlia.
And the not-so-common Common Blue on marjoram.
No comments:
Post a Comment