this post was submitted on 11 Jun 2023
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Betterment and Praxis
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Do you do talks on native pollinators as well or are honey bees local to your area? Yeah bees are crucial. Even the imported ones since most the foods we eat are imported as well.
Of course, we explain other pollinators as well (bats! and moths!). We also have a big pollinator garden that supplements the enclosure. Planting local pollinator friendly vegetation without pesticides is likely the most important thing we can do and encourage others to do :) (I have a feeling I'm not telling you anything you don't know)
Haha I could hear it over and over again and never complain! We have a lot of bird pollinators in my garden so we've re forested the sides of our ridge with 12,000 mixed natives from trees to shrubs to nz flax (harakeke). We also get our native solitary bees so i have some hillsides with their holes in the garden that i leave and then they have anywhere they'd like on the ridgesides.
Our fridge is usually filled with mason bee larvae, which have a higher chance of survival, if you put them back out right when the first flowers come out in spring. (I think those are very similar to the solitary bees you described)
We have a few ground dwelling Lasioglossum varieties here 😊 i don't think we have mason bees but we do have mason wasps