
Hi GPODers!
We’re back in Caroline’s Ontario garden to see more of her pollinator paradise. Check out Part 1, if you missed it yesterday, and read the paragraph below for a refresher on Caroline’s property:
Greetings again from our very snowy farm! We are expecting another wallop of snow this week which makes it feel like the snowiest winter in recent memory. Thank you for featuring some of my winter photos, so I thought I would switch gears and send you some pictures of pollinators. We are fortunate to have a very large property and have spent the last couple of years transitioning from a working sheep farm to a rural escape that is a refuge for all kinds of creatures. We have been adding more native plants to the gardens and have been rehabilitating the area around our large farm pond. A former hay field is now becoming a meadow and we are working on developing an arboretum. Our property has always been free of the use of any chemicals and we believe that this has contributed to the diversity of birds and insects.
A mini swarm of bees has descended on this thistle! I was thinking that photographing one or two bees hard at work was impressive, but Caroline makes it all look easy.
Thank you so much for sharing all of these incredible photos with us, Caroline! Your garden is a true pollinator paradise, and I’m excited to see it continue to evolve and welcome more wildlife.
Are you daydreaming about the pollinators that will visit your garden this spring and summer? Did you get any photos of the wildlife that strolled through or found shelter your gardens this winter? Consider sharing your photos with Garden Photo of the Day! Follow the directions below to submit your photos via email, or send me a DM on Instagram: @agirlherdogandtheroad.
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Comments
I said it yesterday and I'll say it again --- I love close-ups .
Lovely.
Wow, wow, wow! Your photo with the Monarda and stone house with wooden arbor are so pretty. I also really enjoyed your post from yesterday and today.
Learned about bees liking purple flowers, and have been inspired by yesterdays post of your butterflies on thrifted plates- I plan to do the same this year in my garden!
This has been my favorite post in a long time! I am also a pollinator gardener, but I am not as good at photography. Love your photos! Congratulations for being an ecological gardener and doing your part to save our insects!
Your garden is bee and butterfly approved! That last photo of the pink and purples is especially beautiful.
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