Build Your Own Pollinator Waterer in 5 Minutes

Build Your Own Pollinator Waterer in 5 Minutes

  • Megan Douglas
  • 07/8/19

We All Know How Important Bees Are to Our Gardens. Here’s How You Can Help Them Out, According to 9news.

You can build a pollinator-friendly water feature in just five minutes, for under $5.

Simply providing a traditional birdbath won’t work for bees and butterflies. Small pollinators can’t balance on the steep edges and reach the surface of the water to take a sip. They need a safe, non-slippery spot from which they can reach the water easily and then fly off. They don’t need a large pool of water a small “watering hole” will do.

Making a Bee Waterer

To make your bee watering spot, start with a wide, shallow dish like a platter or pie plate. Don’t use a deep container; pollinators are tiny. An inch or so of water is plenty deep for them. Add some small rocks or marbles to fill the bottom and put some flat stones or similar objects to provide a platform where they can sit or stand while they take a drink.

Location, Location, Location

Where you place the bee waterer does matter. If you think about the size of a bumblebee in relation to the size of your yard, you’ll see that it’s a big universe. Don’t make them travel far to find water. Place your bee waterer in or near the garden where flowering plants are. If you live in a small space or in an apartment, you can put these by your container garden, pollinators may need to stop for water as they are traveling from habitat to habitat.

Maintenance of the Bee Watering Spot

Keep the water feature clean. Add fresh water daily and clean out dirt or other debris that might fall in, like leaves or flower petals. Remember that standing water can become a breeding ground for mosquitoes, so changing the water daily can help prevent that as well.

Different Pollinators Have Different Drinking Habits

A bee water feature won’t work for other pollinators. Butterflies prefer a mud hole or shallow puddle, they do something called “puddling” which helps them get minerals from mud puddles. Hummingbirds might enjoy drinking from water in lava rock. For big larger birds, a traditional birdbath is just fine.

To learn more about how you can help the bees, visit 9news.


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