Date:
Garden Blog - Top Tropicals
Date:
Butterfly on a flower that doesn't attract bees
Most tropical flowers bring in pollinators, and bees are usually first in line. But what if you’d rather avoid them? Maybe you’re allergic, or just don’t want bees buzzing around. Good news: some flowers attract butterflies, hummingbirds, moths, or even flies - but not bees.
- 👉 Quick rules:
- ✔️ Night-blooming + strong fragrance = moths or bats, not bees.
- ✔️ Red tubular flowers with little scent = hummingbirds or butterflies, not bees.
- ✔️ Rotten or fermented smell = flies, not bees.
- ✔️ Carnivorous plants = trap insects, no bee nectar.
1. Night-blooming, fragrant - moth and bat flowers
Bees forage by day, so many night-fragrant flowers skip them.
- ▫️Brugmansia - Angel’s Trumpet - big, hanging blooms, moth and bat pollinated.
- ▫️Cestrum nocturnum - Night-blooming Jasmine - powerful night scent, moths only.
- ▫️Hylocereus Dragon Fruit - huge cactus flowers, bats and moths.
- ▫️Brunfelsia - Lady of the Night - sweet fragrance at dusk, no bee interest.
- ▫️Hibiscus - hummingbirds and butterflies visit, bees less so.
- ▫️Heliconis and Gingers - designed for hummingbird beaks, bold tubes are for birds, not bees.
- ▫️More good picks: Ruellia, Sanchezia, Aeschynanthus, Aphelandra, Anisacanthus, Cuphea, Fuchsia, Iochroma, Justicia, Lonicera, Hamelia, Russelia, Odontonema, Tecomaria, Bougainvillea.
- ▫️Amorphophallus (Voodoo Lily) - rotting meat scent.
- ▫️Tacca (Bat Head Lily) - spooky black flowers, fly-pollinated.
- ▫️Stapelia (Carrion Flower) - also fly-pollinated.
- ▫️Aristolochia (Pelican Flower) - giant, bizarre fly-traps.
- ▫️Vanilla orchid - its natural bee pollinator is absent in most regions, so no bee appeal elsewhere.
- ▫️Brassavola nodosa and others - open at night for moths, not bees.
- ▫️Nepenthes (Pitcher Plant) - uses pitchers of liquid to lure and digest insects.
2. Hummingbird and butterfly flowers
Bees don’t see red well. Tubular reds, oranges, and yellows usually go to birds and butterflies.
3. 🐱 Fly-pollinated oddballs
Some flowers smell bad to us but irresistible to flies.
4. 🌸 Specialized orchids
Not all orchids rely on bees. Many use moths, butterflies, or beetles instead.
5. 🕷 Bonus: carnivorous curiosities
Carnivorous plants don’t offer nectar. They trap insects instead, so bees stay away.
These flowers keep the beauty, fragrance, and wildlife appeal - but without making your garden a bee hotspot.
🛒 Explore butterfly attractors
#Butterfly_Plants #How_to #Discover
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Mulberry yogurt swirl
- 🔵Layer fresh mulberries with plain yogurt and a drizzle of honey.
- 🔵The berries bleed into the yogurt, creating a natural tie-dye effect.
🛒 Discover Mulberry varieties
#Food_Forest #Recipes
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Bauhinia madagascariensis, Brugmansia, Caesalpinia, Hamelia, Plumeria pudica
Bauhinia madagascariensis, Brugmansia, Caesalpinia, Hamelia, Plumeria pudica
Date:
September 11th remains one of the darkest days in our
nation’s memory, a tragedy that touched every life in some way. More
than
two decades later, we may come from different places, hold different views,
and
see the world through different lenses — but on this day, we stand
together in remembrance.
Like a young tree reaching toward the sky, we find strength in renewal. Nature reminds us that healing takes root quietly and grows over time. A branch in bloom, a sunrise after storm clouds, the steady rhythm of the seasons — all speak of life’s resilience. As we honor the lives lost, may we also honor the life that continues around us.
And we will keep remembering, together.
For us, trees and gardens are daily reminders of resilience. That’s why we grow them, and share them with others who find hope in nature. Explore our plants.
Matilda the Manx tailless cat