My sunflower plants are done for the year. In a summer of recording bee activity for The Great Sunflower Project, I learned a few things:
- At this latitude, don't bother planting seeds until late May. The first plant didn't come up until June.
- It takes another month for the first flower to appear.
- On a robust plant (I had one very robust plant and two much smaller ones), a new flower will bloom every 3-4 days.
- Only the latest 2-3 flowers have any pollen.
- Don't expect to see honeybees; they concentrate on nectar-bearing blooms, and sunflowers have no nectar. (The GSP is all about native pollen-gathering bees)
- Goldfinches love half-ripe sunflower seeds. They picked the flower heads almost completely bare within a couple of weeks of each one getting seed development.
- There are five common species of native bee in this area: two sizes of bumble bee, 30mm long and 25mm long; a green-thorax-black+yellow-abdomen mason bee of the genus Osmia, 20mm long; a small green bee, 15mm long; and a bee colored like a honey bee but about 18mm long (honey bees are 25mm long).
I am looking forward to next Summer.
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