Recently I have built a new flower garden - well in fact someone else built it and I have just filled it with plants.
Before I put the plants in I tried to plan a succession of flowers, seeds and berries to appeal to the various wildlife.
So here are some of the flowers I have grown which the bees, butterflies and hoverflies (and wasps) have particularly loved:
Back in spring it was daffodils, primroses and cowslips, crocus, almost anything that came up in fact. The early bees also loved the tiny cotoneaster flowers and honeysuckle. Then it was my alpine flowers such as various saxifrages, and bluebells. Blue garden geraniums were very popular and many are still flowering now.
The bees were absolutely exstatic over the thyme - there has been a selection of thymes out throughout the summer and there still are some. The plants are crawling with bees every time the sun is out. Other herbs they love are oregano (they get so drunk they fall off), lavender, various sages, marjoram (although they prefer the oregano even though the two are very similar), chive flowers and leeks and other alliums in the veg patch which I left to go to seed. Other veg patch plant favourites were brassicas left to go to seed and comfrey.
Lupins and foxgloves were very good and of course the various roses. Sea holly was the favourite of the wasps, which crawled all over them.
At the moment, in September, the bees are drunk again on the sedums. I have several large sedum spectabile and one smaller version with dark leaves and deep magenta flowers - it came out first and is still going - bees, butterflies and hoverflies all absolutely adore that. A few giant sunflowers appeared from dropped bird seed (along with a healthy crop of oats, barley, wheat and what I think is quinoa) and of course bees love sunflowers, so no surprise there.
A surprise has been the antirrhinums which I have not grown before and the big bumble bees can't leave them alone. Yesterday when I was weeding amongst them I had big bees buzzing angrily and impatiently right in my face to get me out of the way of their favourite flowers
They love the cosmos too but some things which I thought they would love such as rudbeckia, achillea, monarda and pyrethrum daisies are virtually ignored. The butterfly bushes have almost no butterflies on, but I suspect that has more to do with the swallows feeding habits than that the insects don't like the flowers.
There have been various other flowers which have been popular but I think these have been the biggest successes, especially the herbs and the snapdragons.