I set the saucer on an industrial size wooden spool in dappled shade and soon forgot about it.
Bee waterer with marbles.
Our bee waterer uses three tactics a cover movement and fill to keep mosquitoes from breeding inside.
A reservoir a waterway and a basin.
Water for bees butterfly feeder garden projects garden ideas save the bees bee keeping breast cancer garden design ladybugs save the bees have a successful garden.
Provide a water bowl with marbles this is for the bees to drink from.
They get this water from places like bird baths rivers and streams and open pools of water but they risk drowning.
Equally good is a bucket of water with plenty of bee rafts these can be corks sticks sponges or packing peanuts anything that floats.
Marble pebble bee waterer instructions.
I ve been giving them really strong sugar water half sugar half water to make it.
The marbles give the bees a spot to land so they don t drown when they come to drink.
We re still feeding our honeybees helping them sock away some extra honey to make it through the winter.
One solution to this problem is to add marbles or pebbles to a bowl or pan and then add water.
Once bees discover the source of water they ll visit throughout the day but prime bee watching occurs just before sundown as bees take their last drink before returning to the hive for the night.
The bee waterer has three parts.
Fill the bowl saucer halfway with water so that the rocks marbles are partially submerged.
A saucer filled with marbles or stones makes an excellent diy watering station for bees.
Bees work hard this time of year and need available sources of water to rehydrate.
Place in a spot close to your garden flowering plants or bee hive.
Once you know the basics you can make your own version with materials you have on hand.
Make a bee waterer and help hydrate our pollinators but don t add sugar.
To water honeybees pour marbles into a pie pan and fill it with water.
Make a bee waterer and help hydrate our pollinators but don t add sugar.
Building a bee waterer.
Put the marbles or pebbles into a shallow bowl or pan.
Then i added water and some table salt nothing intense just enough to give it a slightly brackish taste.
One waterer many variations.
Recalling that honey bees love salt water pools i made a wading pool for them from a flower pot saucer and a few handfuls of marbles.
Fill with water so that you can see little rivers of water between the marbles don t cover the marbles completely.