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William Poy Lee Descriptive as if you are there & thought provoking to haunt you nicely in quiet

To Bee or not to Bee...

May 24, 2008, 12:47 am

What a hoot -- journalist Linnea Due pits me, an empircal habitat gardner, in a smack-down against the contra but politic recommendations of a UC Berkeley entomologist, Professor Gordon Frankie, who is the lead researcher of the Urban Bee Project, a research garden facility literally a mile up the street from my humble habitat garden.

In truth, we're not that far apart, as you'll find out when you read the article. My habitat and organic vegetable gardens (including tomatoes & squash) have ended up diversely designed, his ideal for bees. My suggestion of recruiting a number of neighbor's front and side yards to plan a large patch of one single plant is aimed at migrating butteflies like the Monarch and not bees per se. Butterflies can see a color light spectrum from up high not discernable to us and those color tones, like a bright neon sign on a midnight interstate, tell them that a bountiful butterfly diner is up ahead. But it takes a big patch and in the open to catch their attention, and unfortunately, a lot of small plantings are also partially obstructed by other bushes and trees, as I have discovered.

Oh, I actually harvested honey from my hive before the die-off -- without head protection or gloves. Deeelicious!

(C) 2008. William Poy Lee  

Read on below and plant habitat gardens!!! Printed from the East Bay Express Web site:
http://www.eastbayexpress.com/artsculture/growing_bees/Content?oid=730999

Growing Bees

When designing your garden, remember it's a habitat.

Too often when we design gardens we view the space as a static canvas. Those of us who can hardly draw a stick figure find plants the perfect foils for our ineptitude; clashing colors, repeating patterns, and that gorgeous spray where we dropped the seed packet manage to make us look like Rousseau.

Seldom does it occur that we're also creating homes for wildlife; most often our efforts in that direction are confined to discouraging Bambi. We don't consider how to make our gardens more inviting to anybody but two-leggeds.

Memoirist William Poy Lee had the winged in mind — birds and bees — when he redid his garden near North Berkeley BART. Lee learned a lot along the way, although another habitat creator, UC Berkeley entomology prof Gordon Frankie, challenges his conclusions on nearly every point. That's gardening for you: nobody agrees, and nobody cares so long as it works.

"My years'-long idea was a habitat garden, and I picked plants to attract butterflies and bees," Lee said. He was lucky enough to have a beehive, but the bees — Chinese bees acquired from someone who suddenly became allergic to them — disappeared in the general malaise that struck so many bees last fall. "I really loved sitting in the garden in the morning with a cuppa joe in my hand as they stirred and started to swirl out for a day's work of pollen gathering."
We take pollination for granted. Our lemon trees bear lemons nearly all year 'round, peaches defeat our mild freezes, squash set too much fruit, and wildflowers reseed, surrounding us with bloom four seasons of the year. None of this would happen without the work of winds, birds, and insects such as solitary native bees, which as befits their name, don't live in hives. Bees are the champs: they pollinate a third of fruits, vegetables, and nuts.

If you want to attract native pollinators, plant native plants. This is what Lee did. The yard came with fruit trees: lemons, green and red apples, and plums, and someone had planted wild roses. "I put in a bunch of habitat plants I was told would attract bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds," he said. "Some of the habitat plants were drought-resistant, but they never did that well. Maybe they got too much water, I don't know. Others seemed to grow and keep growing, like the native milkweed."

Early on, Lee installed a large clay bowl with a red globe in its center. Water glides down the surface of the globe. "Hummingbirds wash themselves in it," he said. "Butterflies play in it. The pressure is very low, making it easy for critters to play." One day an eagle landed on top of the globe and washed itself and drank. "I was in my bedroom looking out," he said. "I didn't have the guts to get any closer."

Since the fountain was so successful, Lee installed two shallow flat bowls. "I just fill them with a hose to freshen up the water," he said. "I put a potted plant in the middle, and flowers around the base. Bees like it because it's flat." He abandoned many of the languishing natives, noting more bee traffic with flowering exotics. The bees hover close to the ground, admiring his taste in groundcovers. "I don't try to be an expert," he said. "I just try to do what works and not what they tell me works."

Lee has a proposal: "My biggest lesson is that this project should be neighborly. If you have a few plants, they will attract butterflies and bees. But if I could convince my neighbors, all of whom have cut lawns, to do this with me, we could really create a habitat. We could focus on one plant and put it in several yards. If a butterfly saw a number of the same plants, it'd be like finding an oasis. People facing south should grow this plant, and if you're on the west side, you should grow this plant. That's how I would organize it."

Gordon Frankie doesn't think much of Lee's plan, though it pains him to say so. Frankie is the lead researcher on UC Berkeley's Urban Bee Project, headquartered in a garden on Oxford Street, only a mile or so from Lee's yard.

The group's informative web site, nature.berkeley.edu/urbanbeegardens, dates the genesis of the project from 1987, and over that time, Frankie and team members have identified 82 species of native bees in Berkeley. Bumblebees are among them, but you may not have heard others such as sweat bees, carpenter bees, and Osmia, a small metallic-green bee varying between emerald, neon, and jade.

Over the past ten years, the project expanded to Ukiah, Sacramento, Santa Cruz, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, and a spot near Pasadena. "We sample and monitor bees associated with 31 target plants," Frankie said. Each plant grows in the seven study plots, and Frankie and his group found that groups of bees associated with those plants are the same in every city. "If you plant poppies in Ukiah and down in Southern California, you'll attract bumblebees, sweat bees, and honeybees in both places," he said. "If you make frequency counts, the percentages of bees from the different groups are similar."

What are these plants that draw bees like nectar? "People always ask this question," he said. "First of all, bees are seasonal, so you plant to attract different bees in all seasons. Rather than exotic flowering plants, you push habitat gardening, particularly pollen and nectar plants. Ceanothus are really good for pollen, and so are poppies." He doesn't mention it, but the web site includes a garden planner with photos and suggestions of plants that best fit your site and lists of spring and summer plant picks.

"It's very easy," he said. "Just think about what the bees need. They need pollen, nectar, and sex." So they planted sunflowers, groundcover, and cosmos in bare dirt in the project's early days. "The bees followed us into the field," he recalled. "We counted forty species of bees in that garden alone. First we put in ornamentals that people use locally, but now we've switched to mostly natives. We're always experimenting with new things. If something doesn't work, we toss it in the compost. Buckwheat works well, native sunflowers, penstemons, bush sunflowers, Erigeron glaucus, especially 'Wayne Roderick.' Bumblebees like tomato and squash flowers. One bee is specifically designed to pollinate squash: "They fly around really early in the morning like little rockets."

When I floated Lee's neighborhood oasis past Frankie, he was politic: "I think that's a good idea except for this. The more diverse a garden, the better the bees like it. Bees have particular preferences. If you have a diverse garden, you'll get bees spending time there. They'll visit plants they won't normally visit. Fleabane is visited if you have a diverse garden. Cistus hardly ever gets a visit unless you put it with diverse plants. It's called the mall effect. Every stall has a different group of flowers."

Frankie has a couple other pointers: only female bees sting, but that may not do you much good. Instead of worrying about being stung, consider your ground. "People mulch too much," says Frankie. He explains that most of our native bees — and we have 1600 species in California — are solitary ground nesters. "They can't negotiate three inches of wood chips," says Frankie. "They'll have to go somewhere else. Take up that awful black plastic and leave bare soil for the bees.

And of course don't use pesticides. You have to be thinking about habitat."

And home. Gardens aren't only eye candy; they're somebody's kitchen and bedroom. Act accordingly, and your flowers and fruit will prosper.

Eric Nichols

Eric Nichols says:

Don't you think it's unfair......

......that BUTTERFLIES can see up there in ultraviolet and we can't? I mean, what's up with that? Don't you think we DESERVE to see ultraviolet? What's a butterfly need to see ultraviolet for? They don't even use tanning booths! Eeesh!

 

Well, anyway, I do hope the bees come back. I hear they've had a couple of rough years down there, what with vampire mites and navigational malfunctions and such.

I've just learned that ants are entrepreneurial....they are NOT the "workers paradise" we once had thought. More on this later. (Ants have learned how to "extend credit" to customer ants, for example)

 

Eric

 

William Lee

William Poy Lee says:

banker ants...

perhaps we humans are not the highest creation as we often think we are, but in our oversize way, "aping" societal behaviors well established throughout the insect kingdom.

Ants who extend credit -- YIKES!!!  Eric -- looking to know more about that!   Puts a different meaning to the in "A" in WAMU.

Eric Nichols

Eric Nichols says:

Banker ants.....the rest of the story

Hi Willliam.

I feel like I'm a bad scientist, because I can't cite the particular study. Alas, I have no Rolodex in by brain; the countless scientific journals I read are pretty much filed in random. :) But I do have a good memory, so here's the gist.

First some background: Proverbs 6:6 exhorts us thusly:

"…..Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise:
Which having no guide, overseer, or ruler, provideth her meat in the summer, and gathereth her food in the harvest…".

Marxist ecomomists, as Marxist economists were wont to do, often misapplied this Biblical injunction as a justification for communalism. The ant colony was held up as the example for pure Communism, which we would be best to emulate, with the full endorsement of God Himself.

Now there are thousands of species of ants, and the entire biomass of ants is about ten times the mass of human beings....which is probably a good reason not to annoy too many ants. Anyway....scientists looking at ant colonies noticed that certain ants would partition off a section of the "farm." It first seemed like certain of these ants were hoarding supplies behind their little counters. But it also seemed certain select ants were allowed to enter the partitioned area....ants who didn't actually build the partition. It also looked like these select ants were allowed to carry off small amounts of this horde. This got the curiosity glands of the scientists activated. They looked with great interest at this curious transaction. They noticed that the select ants and the "entrepreneur" ants would rub antennas after their little exchange. At first this looked like they were just giving each other a 'high five"....not too unusual a thing in the animal kingdom. They looked at this a little closer. And closer. And closer. And they discovered that the antenna rubbing was actually the bestowing of "scent credits." Ants with a better credit rating rubbed antennas a little longer. Some ants were denied access behind the counter after a mere cursory touching of antennas....clearly their scent credits had run out.

Anyway....the implications of this whole thing became quite profound, as one might imagine. All ants are NOT created equal. As George Orwell said in Animal Farm...."All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others...."

Now you know. :)

 

Eric

Belle Yang

Belle Yang says:

I stopped being afraid of death

after seeing a documentary on Edward O. Wilson, the famed entomologist. In the earth there are beautiful fauna we can not view with the named eye. I used to collect bugs and the thought of having neighbors makes death seem a new life.

William Lee

William Poy Lee says:

Fauna...for the eye and for the tongue

Belle -- you constantly amaze me with what you know, what you've done.  I know your father gardens, but do you too have a love of digging your hands into the dirt, seeing squiggly worms and potato bugs, of seeds or plantings of flowers you've placed into that dirt come up year after year red, yellow, and purple; or the thrill of munching vegetables raw  -- of tomatoes, green beans, and baby bok choy leaves you've nurtured and protected through a hot summer.

My bet is that you have!!!  

When I view your paintings, you remind me of the butterflies who see spectrums of light we normal humans don't even know exist.

Eric Nichols

Eric Nichols says:

I became very afraid of death......

....the first time I ever heard "In a Gadda da Vida" played on a bagpipe. I imagined hell as being In a Gadda da Vida" played by millions of bagpipes for all eternity. That's enough to make the devil himself repent!

:)

Eric