Gardens
Flowers That Attract Bees
Filling your yard with flowers that attract bees is just one small way you can aid their survival while also supporting the environment.

Bees are pollinators, with round, furry bodies.
Photo Credit: Aimee TuckerBees Love Native Plants
There are a few tricks to encourage bees to frequent your garden, the simplest of which is to plant flowers that bees love. (Note that it’s especially important to ensure these plants are placed in locations suited for optimum blooming.) Incorporating as many native plantings into your landscape as possible is also appealing to bees. Native flowers will attract native bees which have evolved and co-existed together harmoniously for centuries.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
Plant the Flower Colors Bees Love
Filling your yard with blooms in shades of blue, purple, white, and yellow can attract bees to your garden. When planting flowers in these color schemes, be sure to cluster them rather than planting them sparsely. This will entice more bees to buzz your way, as they prefer larger, concentrated pollen and nectar sources. Bees also swarm toward sunny locations and will be more likely to frequent plants that thrive in full-sun areas rather than in shaded gardens. Ready for a list of flowers that attract bees? Here are ten common flowering plants that are known to be favored by bees. Planting a combination of these blooming beauties is a sure way to keep busy bees buzzing around your garden all summer long.Flowers That Attract Bees
- Black-Eyed Susan
- Daisy
- Roses
- Sunflower
- Zinnia
- Bee Balm
- Dandelion
- Clover (all varieties)
- Goldenrod
- Milkweed
We found that plume poppy attracts TONS of bees, especially bumbles and honey. The buzzing is so loud, we can hear it inside. It took us a while to figure out what the plant was (seemed like a huge weed). It’s persistent. At first, we tried pulling it out (always before flowers), but it just kept coming back. Then we just ignored it and it bloomed (had never seen it before). That’s when the bees arrived on it. We now love this crazy plant and are trying to add it to other places around the yard to bring in more bees.
Is there a natural ‘pesticide’ that will Kill Poison Ivy or must I resort to Bayer’s Weed Killer? The leaves are Huge, at least four inches when mature. It is growing up one side of my house!
Do you mean “herbicide” when you say “pesticide?”
Bees love our butterfly bushes, too. As well, they attract hummingbirds, hummingbird moths, and many different butterflies.