Amateur Gardening

Tongue twisters

amateurgardening.com Daily blog and news

AS the year wears on it gets harder to identify the bees in the garden. I seem to see a lot of larger bees with tapering abdomens, but I’m unsure whether they’re queen bumblebees or cuckoo bees. The smaller workers all seem to look the same, too. However, looking at the flowers they’re visiting helps, because some bees have shorter tongues than

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Amateur Gardening

Amateur Gardening5 min read
Cannier Composting
The most sustainable compost is homemade, so starting a compost heap is an extremely positive thing to do. It provides us with superb, nutrient-rich organic matter that’s full of beneficial microbes to enrich our soils. Assembling a compost heap with
Amateur Gardening2 min read
Your GARDENING TEA BREAK
The day this issue of AG is available on newsstands (Tuesday, 23 April) is St George’s Day. As with the feast days of Saints Patrick, David and Andrew, it will be a day of national pride and commemoration. These three saints have the shamrock, the da
Amateur Gardening5 min read
A Daylily A Day…
Some 30 years ago I was given my first daylily (hemerocallis). It was not something I had been particularly longing for. Yes, I’d known about these plants, and yes, their flowers were OK. But I hadn’t been bowled over by them. I duly planted my gift

Related Books & Audiobooks