What's flowering as forage in your area

  • Thread starter Curly green fingers
  • Start date
Beekeeping & Apiculture Forum

Help Support Beekeeping & Apiculture Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Strong smell of vanilla in the garden by the home apiary - the eleagnus is flowering and I can hear the bees all over it. They appear to have abandoned the ivy for this. Lots of orange pollen going in as well - probably from late flowering asters. My large rosemary bush and the tamarisk is also flowering. Weird weather.
 
When I was putting the bins out this lunchtime I saw bees working ivy for the first time. There's plenty that still isn't ready though, so I'm guessing this is the first of it even though it seems to have been in bud for ages.

I also saw some working the borage growing in my veggie plot. I suspect they're flowers on plants that germinated from the seed produced by the first planting, but I've never grown borage before so I'm not certain.

James
 
Was out for a walk along the coast south of Chichester yesterday and saw so much in flower! Dogwood, toadflax, bramble, ivy, gorse. dandelion and bees wasps etc were all over the oak trees.
 
Last edited:
When I was putting the bins out this lunchtime I saw bees working ivy for the first time. There's plenty that still isn't ready though, so I'm guessing this is the first of it even though it seems to have been in bud for ages.

I also saw some working the borage growing in my veggie plot. I suspect they're flowers on plants that germinated from the seed produced by the first planting, but I've never grown borage before so I'm not certain.

James
I grow it every year, the plants that seeded have thick lush green leaves with no flower which we have dug in now for green compost. I planted some from seed late, and they are in flower!!!
 

Attachments

  • 20221012_152945.jpg
    20221012_152945.jpg
    2.1 MB · Views: 1
Still a lot of ivy here, I was near the apiary and noticed a buzzing sound near this wall with Ivy. Mid October, Marvelous.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_20221013_125841.jpg
    IMG_20221013_125841.jpg
    1.2 MB · Views: 2
  • IMG_20221013_125850.jpg
    IMG_20221013_125850.jpg
    1.5 MB · Views: 1
Was out for a walk along the coast south of Chichester yesterday and saw so much in flower! Dogwood, toadflax, bramble, ivy, gorse. dandelion and bees wasps etc were all over the oak trees.
No wonder my girls are so busy!
 
Two shrubs that have survived the worst drought I have known:
- Salvia 'Hot lips' (what an evocative name!): has been in flower several weeks and today visited by honeybees (nearest hive 500m) and bumbles.
- Ceratostigma: lovely blue flowers in late summer-autumn. Occasionally visited by the spectacular hummingbird hawkmoth.
 

Attachments

  • C4B16A55-3405-458B-BD2C-00D3E948511E.jpeg
    C4B16A55-3405-458B-BD2C-00D3E948511E.jpeg
    3.4 MB · Views: 1
  • FA29AD88-2C04-43C9-BC37-51340D2E7B0A.jpeg
    FA29AD88-2C04-43C9-BC37-51340D2E7B0A.jpeg
    3.4 MB · Views: 1
Made it up to the allotment today - it's been somewhat neglected recently and needed a good tidy up.
Borage and nasturtiums haven't realised summer's over.
IMG_20221113_114027.jpg

Decent number of bees (and other pollinators, mostly hoverflies) on the cosmos.
IMG_20221113_130654.jpg
 
I noticed just a small patch (of a huge patch) of WINTER Heliotrope in flower yesterday.
 
Ceanothus and strawberries.. And ivy

AN odd mix.
 
Field of white mustard in flower across the road - girls going crazy and mid-November!
View attachment 34405
View attachment 34406
I found two fields of what I thought was rape - but seeing your photo it could be mustard. I’ll investigate properly next time out with the dogs. Is this sown as a catch crop / to reduce erosion etc during the Winter?
 
I found two fields of what I thought was rape - but seeing your photo it could be mustard. I’ll investigate properly next time out with the dogs. Is this sown as a catch crop / to reduce erosion etc during the Winter?
Grazing I assume as this am there is a flock of sheep munching their through it!
 
Either Blackthorn or Hawthorn flowering here. Sorry about the poor quality photo
 

Attachments

  • FC2754CB-B123-4740-A2F3-FB7ACBFB6E36.jpeg
    FC2754CB-B123-4740-A2F3-FB7ACBFB6E36.jpeg
    1.8 MB · Views: 0
Bees back onto viburnum. Normally after xmas.
 

Attachments

  • 20221113_164832.jpg
    20221113_164832.jpg
    835.1 KB · Views: 0
My wife and I spent yesterday treking along the South Downs We spotted 10 plants in flower that normally flower up to September...... bees, bumbles and butterflies on them! Strange times we live in!
 

Latest posts

Back
Top