This is the time for the first and best bloom of the roses. The climbing rose at the front of the house is Madame Isaac Pereire and has just started flowering.
The early bumble bees have claimed this rose as theirs.
The male early bumble bees have started to appear. They will be looking for the new queens so their cycle will soon be finishing. I will miss them, they are so quick and lively. I will have to wait until next spring until the new queens appear and start their own nests.
My Rosa Mutabilis is making a bid for freedom. I planted her too close to the willows, which were cut short at the end of March, and now she is trying to escape from them before they shade her again. The willows will win the race so I must really find a better place for her in the autumn.
The colour of this rose changes as the flower matures.
Of course, the best feature is that the bees love the rose pollen.
It’s amazing how my view point of plants can change. I was given some Knipofia or red hot pokers but never really liked them and I removed most of them. Kourosh saved this one. It is in a very poor position but it attracts a lot of honeybees. It must have a lot of nectar as they stay inside the flower a long time and I often see two or three bees on the same flower.
It is not only bees that we notice. The “dead leaf” on the young willow shoots looked a very unusual shape – for a willow leaf.
A closer look showed us a beautiful moth, Smerinthus ocellata, the Eyed Hawk Moth, I think. It looks so clear in a photograph but the resemblance to a dead leaf is uncanny in the light of day.
The bees are omnipresent in our lives at the moment. Our neighbour opposite has a laurel hedge and I had warned her to tell me if she saw any strange insects flying near it because Asian hornets often nest low in hedges for their first small nest. Two days ago she came to see me because of the flying insects and the noise of buzzing in the hedge. I immediately got on my bee suit as the laurel was not in flower so I presumed a swarm had landed in the hedge.
She was quite right. There was a lot of noise and it was honey bees! I searched all through the hedge, it was empty in places, but there was no swarm and the noise was not in the one area but all over.
Then we noticed that the bees were all doing the same thing. They were on the underside of the very young shoots and lapping up the surface exudate.
The laurel is known as Laurier palme here. I checked on it and its latin name is Prunus laurocerasus. The leaves are actually toxic if you were to choose to chop up the leaves and make cherry-laurel water. However, small doses of this water has been used in the past to give an almond flavour to pastries and sauces. Traditional medicines have used the cherry-laurel as an anti-spasmodic and sedative and to treat coughs. It contains hydrocyanic acid and I can think of better things to flavour my sauces with.
However, the bees want it. Could it be an ingredient of propolis? Propolis is what the bees use to fill any holes in their hives and has antiseptic, antibacterial and antioxydant properties.
The bees are omnipresent. They tax our ingenuity by swarming in tall Hawthorn trees but Kourosh has improvised with very long stick and a plastic bucket secured with packaging tape. I did not think it would work – but it did. We are at swarm number seven now. It has been a busy time for the bees.
At the moment I look forward to a quieter life, like that of our little tree frog that sleeps under the plastic cover of our outdoor table. He only wakes up when we lift of the cover to have our morning coffee.