Out walking today and I went past about 600x10mt of wild grass and flowers thistle foxglove ect. I slowly walked past and out of interest started to count how many bees I could spot.
Answer 2 .
so I added butterflies to the mix as there was lots of stingers at the back
So 600*10mt of very green and flowering land I spotted 2 bees and 12 assorted butterflies.
I’m in a semi rural area how many bees are your area . I’m curious now
Bee numbers down here too, despite having a garden that’s quite pollinator friendly. It’s all a bit concerning, apparently issue is that the spring was too wet for them so a lot of colonies starved.
One of the reasons I was counting is because there are non in our garden we had miner and leaf cutters nesting in the hotels but they have gone no honey or bumblebee activity.
We do have loads of Lady bugs and the frogs are doing ok
We read the instructions for our bee hotel and moved into a sunny, sheltered spot. We have then had the pleasure of watching Mason bees slowly but steadily filling in the holes after laying their eggs 🙂
By all accounts we then need to protect it from the wasps.
And Mason bees are apparently awesome pollinators.
Ive seen very, very few in and around the garden this year. But I walked past the local church late yesterday evening and saw a swarm on the stonework; they’d emerged from a ventilation hole in the stone which has sheltered an active colony for the last several years.
A swarm flew over my head at work yesterday, I heard them first, I thought it was a drone!
Numbers definitely seem down this year, butterflies are drastically down too. Numerous possible reasons including the very wet last 8 months we’ve had, and of course pesticide use.
Loads in my garden. I have to keep a set of ladders in the conservatory to get them out on a daily basis. Bumbles, solitary bees, hornets, freaky looking wasps with long tails – all sorts. And honeybees of course because I have six hives at the bottom of the garden. There’s also a bumble nest under the shed and mining bees in several parts of the law, plus solitary bees in the lime mortar.
We’ve got, or had, mason bees living in the garden wall next to the kitchen. As a result last year the house was full of lost mason bees and I had to rescue several bees per day for around a month, this year I’ve rescued one
Loads of different bumblebees in our garden (Glasgow). They seem to love a particularly boring looking bush with very tiny buds outside the kitchen window. Love watching them.
A couple of summers ago we had tree bumblebees in the loft. They were awesome.
The answer is partly (and counter intuitively) the rise in the numbers of bees. Honey bees compete for resources just like any other animal, and in comparison to solitary or other species of bees that don’t hive as cooperatively they’re very good at harvesting local resources. If you don’t see as many solitary bees that you used to, it’s probs because there’s a honey bee hive locally.
I’ve just been told that our carpenter bees have moved back into the old nest box. Apparently objected to the lawnmower being run around yesterday, bumping the shed the nest box is mounted on.
The sun is out, the buddleia is flowering, as is the scabious, salvia, verbina, ragwort (in the wild bit) and bit of clover. Many bees in our garden and even a few butterflies.
Thousands of them…and thousands of butterflies (and lots of hummingbird moths). The joy of living in rural SW France in a department mainly comprising of small family farms; not the huge endless fields of wheat/barley etc, seemingly little use of pesticides and lots of smallholders with a beevive or two. Wonderful
I’ve had one butterfly and one wasp in my house this year, in the last week to be specific, this is in galloway with fields to two sides of me and my wee patch of front garden has been left to go feral with wild flowers. loads of flying ants in the past few days though – they must have the shittiest flight engineers possible as they seem to spend most of the day just crawling around inside my house.
Was strimming the lawn earlier (tells you all you need to know) and hit a clump that turned out to be the top of a bumblebee nest! Poor wee buggers never even reacted, not sure if I clocked one but I moved a load of cuttings to the nest for them to rebury it (was fascinating watching them work). All covered now but still some buzzing about around dusk, there’s a thunderstorm due in the morning, thinking about putting a broken pot or a propped up pot base over it to give them time to get sorted.