Pollinators
Pollinating plants are those that produce flowers.
When we talk about pollinating plants we often refer to those that largely depend on insects like bees, butterflies, and birds to transfer pollen from one flower to another.
Some common examples of pollinating plants include fruit trees like apple, cherry, and peach trees, various wildflowers, garden flowers like sunflowers, lavender and dahlia, as well as important crops like tomatoes, cucumbers, and squash (all these plants qualify as biohacking materials)
Trees
- Prunus Cherry
- Feb – Mar
- Acacia Dealbata
- Feb – Mar
- Corylus
- Mar – Apr
- Liquidumbar Sweet Gum
- Apr – May
- Malus
- Apr – May
- Sorbus
- May – Jun
- Ligustrum (Privet)
- Sept – Oct
Shrubs
- Buddleia
- Jul - Oct
- Lavender
- Jun - Sept
- Ceanothus
- May - Jun
- Rhododendron
- Apr – Jun
- Fuchsia
- Jun - Nov
- Mahonia
- Dec - Feb
- Hawthorn
- Apr - May
- Daphne
- Apr - Oct
- Hebe
- Jun - Sept
- Hydrangea Paniculata
- Jul - Oct
- Hypericum
- Jul - Oct
Herbaceous
- Salvia
- Jun - Oct
- Echinops
- Jul - Aug
- Scabiosa
- Jul - Sept
- Agastache
- Jun - Sept
- Echinacea
- Jun - Sept
- Geranium
- Jun - Oct
- Nepeta
- May - Aug
- Verbena
- Jun - Sept