Pollinators in Your Garden and How to Identify Them
When we first brought honeybee hives to Alchemy Farm, I imagined myself immersed in the hum of happy, thriving bees. But I soon discovered that my vision of beekeeping didn’t align with the reality.
During our first year at Alchemy Farm, I enthusiastically began attending the beekeepers' course and brought two honeybee hives to our farm. I quickly realized I wasn't comfortable tending bees. I didn't like opening the hive and smoking them into submission, or administering chemicals to kill mites in the hive—which also kills bees.
Bees have been looking after themselves for millions of years and I felt like I was interfering. I also had no intention of collecting honey from the hives, they needed the honey more than we did. As if sensing my reluctance, the hives swarmed and left the farm.
I have since discovered that having honeybee hives on the farm was not in the best interests of the other pollinators, like the wild bees that call Alchemy Farm home.
These wild bees and pollinators are under increasing pressure as they lose habitat not only to humans but also to managed honeybee hives.
As I began to focus on wildflowers and the diverse pollinators they attracted, I realized how little I knew about these incredible creatures that keep ecosystems thriving. I started paying closer attention to the pollinators in our garden—and this led me to wonder: what is the difference between a bee and a wasp?
Do You Ever Wonder if a Bee is a Bee?
I have continued to grow flowers, thousands and thousands of flowers for all different types of bees. As I worked in our gardens tending flowers I met pollinators I didn't know existed. I’d see something resembling a bee and wonder, friend or foe?
Have you ever seen what you thought was a bee but it didn’t look quite right? It can be challenging to tell the difference between bees, wasps and yellow jackets especially as their size and colouring are so similar.
BEES
Bees have fuzzy, downy coats to help gather pollen, which is attracted by static electricity while they drink nectar. This pollen is carried on their legs and backs. Wasps, on the other hand, have smooth bodies—no hair—and narrow waists.
Bees are generally friendly and docile while wasps can be aggressive, especially when food is involved, and they can sting multiple times. Honeybees are the only bee to die after they sting once.
Have you ever watched a wasp at work, building its home or hunting in the garden?
Like bees, wasps are important to the ecosystem. As carnivores with a special liking for aphids, grubs, caterpillars and other bugs, they help rid your garden of insect pests, and they also do some pollinating. Along with flies, wasps are also the clean-up crew of nature.
In the winter, honeybees hunker down in their nests and live on the stores of honey they have gathered during the summer. On frosty winter nights, I often wonder if the wasps sleeping among the firewood dream of summer’s buzzing warmth. When the days become warm and sunn, they may emerge from the nest for short periods.
Male yellow jacket wasps die over the winter, while the female queens hibernate. Here at Alchemy Farm, wasps love sleeping in amongst the logs in the firewood shelter, which makes for interesting trips for logs in the middle of the night in the snow!
There are Many Different Kinds of Wasps
Dirt dauber wasps drink flower nectar, and they also hunt for spiders and other insects in your garden. They stuff these insects inside their nests made of mud and lay eggs in individual cells as a food source for the larvae.
Paper wasps build new hives each year, made from dead wood and plant stems. You can usually find these nests under eaves, porches, and rooftops. They pollinate your garden while they drink flower nectar. They eat various insects and meat which they carry to the nests to feed their young. They are not aggressive by nature but will sting to defend their nests.
When it comes to their hives, bees live in colonies of about 75,000. Wasp colonies are much smaller, averaging around 10,000. Paper wasp colonies are smaller with hives ranging from 100 to 400 cells and 100 adults.
Bees and Wasps are Important Allies
Bees and wasps are important allies in your garden. Please do not kill or use toxic pesticides or chemicals in response to any pests in your garden. They are all beneficial to the ecosystem. If you use poisons and kill your insect allies, your garden will have no protection when new pests move in.
By working with nature rather than against it, we can create thriving gardens that support not just bees and wasps, but the entire interconnected web of life. Let’s celebrate our pollinating allies and the roles they play in keeping our world alive and blooming.