Features, Lifestyles, LIFESTYLES -- FEATURE SPOT
 By  Staff Reports Published 
3:00 pm Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Gardening with Sam: Learn more about the blooms and the bees

Take a deep dive into how flower pollination works. There’s a lot more to it than meets the eye.

First, let’s review a little pollination vocabulary.

  • Anther: the male part of the flower that produces pollen
  • Filaments: stalks that support the anthers
  • Stigma: base for pollen
  • Style: female part of the flower that connects stigma to flower
  • Stamen: the sum of anther and filament

Playing the part of matchmakers are the pollinators. Bees, butterflies and birds become unwitting cupids when they visit flowers for food.

To attract more pollinators, grow a diverse variety of plants native to your area. Here are a few great options:

  • Bee Balm. This summer favorite easily attracts bees, butterflies and hummingbirds.
  • Milkweed. It’s not just for monarchs. Many varieties of this perennial offer attractive nectar sources.
  • Catmint. With long-lived blooms, catmint entices plenty of pollinators and is deer resistant.
  • Sedum. This flower offers nectar for tons of pollinators all summer long.
  • Penstemon. A wide array of kinds and hues make this tough perennial one to try.
  • Zinnias. Old-fashioned in the garden of our past, zinnias feature very strong stems. Butterflies and birds love the beautiful blooms of all colors, large, small and medium. They are great to cut and place on your porch or summer table for a splash of color.

So how do these bees, butterflies, bugs and birds become unwitting cupids when they visit flowers for food?

Some pollinators eat parts of the flower itself. Others seek the sugar-rich nectar of the protein and amino acid-packed pollen, either to eat themselves or collect for their offspring.

Flowers are designed to woo specific pollinators. For instance, bees and butterflies tend to swarm flowers with sweet aromas, but blooms that rely on hummingbirds for pollination typically have no scent and rely solely on color. Red would be the most common.

Next time you see a bee light on a flower, stop and think about all the pollinators have to do with our gardens to make them reproduce more flowers.

May I talk a little about woodpeckers?

They make a lot of noise and will peck holes in your house. Sometimes hanging CDs on a string in the area where you see or hear them will help. Fake spiders will also work for a while, but woodpeckers are smart; they know they are not real and will start pecking again.

Sometimes if you put a sheet of metal around a post in your yard, the will go to that and not peck your house up.

Woodpeckers use the drumming as a form of communication. One bird might drum 8,000 times a day. A downy woodpecker typically strikes 16 times per second.

Also on Franklin County Times
Kiwanis Club returns; Key Club planned
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
April 1, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — The Kiwanis Club has returned to Russellville. Members gathered last week at Calvary Baptist Church to review bylaws, elect officers an...
Bridge work moves forward on SR 243
Main, News, Russellville, ...
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
April 1, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Construction of a new bridge over Cedar Creek on SR 243 is moving forward as crews recently completed a major step in the project. Last...
Neighbors steps down as chairman of Democrats
News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
April 1, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — Rick Neighbors has stepped down as chair of the Franklin County Democratic Executive Committee, citing personal commitments he said no ...
Kiel named a 2026 ‘Emerging Leader’
News, Russellville
By Addi Broadfoot For the FCT 
April 1, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE — District 18 State Rep. Jamie Kiel has been named to the 2026 class of Emerging Leaders by GOPAC, a national group which works to train ...
NIL era has become a complete disaster
Columnists, Opinion
April 1, 2026
The modern NIL era is a complete disaster. Players walk away from contracts just to chase a new shiny opportunity. Coaches are left begging their alum...
Ex-educators learn about crime prevention from guest speaker
Columnists, Franklin County, News
HERE AND NOW
April 1, 2026
Members of the Franklin County Retired Educators Association learned about crime prevention during their recent monthly meeting. Association members w...
K-9 Mia gets helmet for protection
News
Kevin Taylor For the FCT 
April 1, 2026
ROGERSVILLE — When Police Lt. Lucas Stansell and his K-9 Mija are called into action to track a person through the woods, or to go into a home to exec...
Biblical roles create big sandals to fill
News
Chelsea Retherford Staff Writer 
April 1, 2026
Onstage, they are adversaries — one a reluctant liberator, the other a ruler clinging to power. But offstage, McKinley Copeland and Zach Adams share s...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *