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Gardening

Leaf cutter bees.

(14 Posts)
shysal Mon 15-Jul-13 15:44:27

Today whilst eating my lunch outside the back door, I watched with fascination as a bee made repeated visits to a pouch of Busy Lizzies with pieces of leaf. I looked up on the internet and found that they are solitary bees which are useful pollinators.
I doubt whether my twice daily watering will have done much good. Does anyone know whether I could supply a suitable alternative site nearby, or should I give up on the flowers and let the life cycle continue? I have not seen any leaves with discs removed, so it must be using a neighbour's plant or the ash tree beyond.

Bags Mon 15-Jul-13 16:05:11

If they are carrying on in spite of your twice daily watering, that presumably isn't bothering them. What is a 'pouch'?

Bags Mon 15-Jul-13 16:05:36

Guessing it might be a basket container type of thing. Is that right?

shysal Mon 15-Jul-13 16:35:36

Bags, yes it is bag with plants in each of 12 holes. The bee is using a hole where a plant broke off and died. I have just ordered a little bee hotel to hang on the fence next to it. bee hotel

PRINTMISS Tue 16-Jul-13 07:41:15

I love sitting in the garden and watching the insects at work, and can remember doing this as a child, so it is something which I have always liked to do, and is a good excuse for a 'wild' garden. Still haven't seen many butterflies, but we do have quite a few bumble bees, (I always feel these are very gentle creatures, not sure why).

grannyactivist Tue 16-Jul-13 09:05:09

When my son was a toddler he used to love to stroke bumble bees he found in the garden. He persisted in spite of being stung a few times and his then childminder used to be very embarrassed when having to tell me of yet another sting.

PRINTMISS Tue 16-Jul-13 09:09:34

They do have that lovely furry look don't they. I have never picked one up I am always afraid of harming things if I touch them.

Spindrift Sat 20-Jul-13 09:38:15

My eldest son had bought me a large concrete owl one year, I noticed a while later that it's eyes were getting smaller (no hadn't been drinking smile I sat & watched & there was a leaf cutter bee making a nest there, it was lovely to watch, I love nature & if any creature decides to nest here I leave them to it, most are good for the garden anyway.

PRINTMISS Sat 20-Jul-13 17:34:35

The hot weather has brought out a few butterflies, hurrah! That does not include the cabbage white of course, although everything has a use I am told.

Minty Sat 20-Jul-13 18:09:40

We have a bee house in the garden and the bees have been very busy filling it with neatly cut leaves and placing them in each of the holes.Amazing to watch.

AlieOxon Sat 20-Jul-13 18:31:16

Do these bees take bits off privet leaves? and Periwinkle and Lysimachia?
Something does in my garden.

Earlier in the year I thought they had gone, but they just started late - like everything else!

Spindrift Sat 27-Jul-13 09:06:12

They do take bits off privet Alie, I went to fetch a privet plant I had in a pot the other day ready to plant, it looked like a completely different plant with all the bits "cut" out of it smile, wish I knew where the bees were nesting, they are wecome to any plant they want, I love anything like that

AlieOxon Tue 30-Jul-13 17:13:12

Ah, thank you Spindrift. (what a lovely name!)
I did think the privet was rather tough for any leaf cutter!

Spindrift Thu 08-Aug-13 07:32:24

I have never seen so many butterflies as we have this year, yes mostly cabbage white, but love butterflies of any kind, lots of moths around too & ladybirds, conditions seem to be favourable for them all. I went to a garden centre the other day, I am sure they had imported small bumble bees, the plants were swarming with them, in fact I left some plants I would have liked because they had so many on & didn't want to disturb them