Boost your landscape’s beauty with bee-friendly shrubs

Plant a variety of bee-friend­ly shrubs and enjoy year-round beauty and loads of pollinator appeal. Include a mix of spring, summer and fall bloomers, pro­viding nectar and pollen for visiting bees throughout the season. Selecting bee-friendly shrubs suited to the growing conditions and the available space also boosts your land­scape’s beauty and reduces maintenance.

Start the season off with dwarf fothergilla (Fothergilla gardenia). Its honey scented white flowers first appear before the leaves, offering food to early foraging bees and other pollina­tors. The blue-green leaves turn shades of red, orange and yel­low in the fall.

Include black (Aronia mela­nocarpa) and red chokeberries (Aronia arbutifolia) with white flowers in spring, great fall color and the black or red fruit that persists into winter. These plants tolerate some shade, wet and occasionally dry soil.

Grow the native ninebark (Physocarpus opulifolius) in those sunny well-drained loca­tions. This durable drought-tol­erant shrub also tolerates occa­sionally wet soil. White flowers with a pinkish tinge appear in late spring and the rugged exfo­liating bark adds texture to the winter landscape.

If you are dealing with black walnut toxicity and dry loca­tions, consider planting New Jersey Tea (Ceanothus ameri­canus). This North American native shrub is deer-resistant and prefers full-sun and well-drained soil. White flowers ap­pear in summer that not only support bees and other pollina­tors, but this plant is also a host for several butterflies.

Your garden will be abuzz with bee activity when growing Kalm’s St. John’s Wort (Hyperi­cum kalmianum). This small shrub is covered with bright yellow flowers in mid-summer. Grow this drought-tolerant shrub in full to part sun and well-drained soil.

For moist to wet locations consider Buttonbush (Cepha­lanthus occidentalis). Its round white flowers appear mid-sum­mer, inviting a variety of pol­linators to the garden.

Summersweet (Clethra alni­folia) and Virginia sweetspire (Itea virginica) are two more summer-blooming shrubs that are shade and moist to wet soil tolerant. Look for varieties of these deer-resistant shrubs that fit your available space and gar­den design.

For dry shade consider dwarf bush honeysuckle (Diervilla lonicera). This is not one of the invasive honeysuckles but rather a native plant with yel­low summer flowers and leaves that turn from yellow to orange and red then purple in fall.

Brighten your late summer and fall landscape with Rose of Sharon (Hibiscus syriacus). This large shrub appeals to sev­eral specialized bees, prefers full sun to partial shade and is moderately deer resistant.

Finish off the season with Seven-son flower (Heptacodium miconioides) considered a large shrub or small tree. You and the many visiting pollinators will appreciate the late season fragrant white blossoms. The rosy-purple calyx persists and the attractive exfoliating bark extends its ornamental appeal through winter.

Protect shrubs that are susceptible to animal damage with an organic repellent like Plantskydd (plantskydd.com). It is safe for pollinators and rain and snow resistant, which means fewer applications are needed. Apply any repellent you select before animals start feeding and according to label directions for best results.

Adding bee-friendly shrubs is an excellent way to support these important members of our community. Don’t stop there. Consider including some polli­nator-friendly flowers in your gardens to further extend the bloom time and beauty of your landscape.

Melinda Myers’ website is www. MelindaMyers.com.

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