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How to Make a Bee Watering Station With a Bowl of Marbles

Close Up Of Honey Bee Drinking Water

“Busy bee” is a term often used to describe friends and relatives who are always doing something. You probably could have guessed the phrase comes from the active lifestyle of the bee, but you may not know that the yellow-and-black pollinators tend to about 2,000 flowers daily. That’s hard work!

Even if your yard lacks a pretty pollinator garden, you can still make it a friendly and accessible pit stop for those industrious bees.

How to Make a Bee Waterer with Marbles

Like humans, bees need water on hot summer days to drink and cool off. Unfortunately, when they stop at birdbaths or forest streams, they risk drowning or encountering larger animals looking for a snack.

There’s a simple, safe solution. Grab a pan or shallow bowl and add a good amount of stones, pebbles or marbles. Then fill it with water. The rocks and knick-knacks will give bees a nice landing spot and help avoid drowning. It’s best to change the water every week or so to make sure other insects don’t lay eggs.

Should I Add Sugar to the Water?

It may sound like a good idea, but don’t add anything to the water, especially sugar and honey. Bees are quick learners. If they stop at the bee watering station in your yard and taste sugar, they might keep returning with their friends to collect the sugar instead of picking it up from flowers.

Honey sounds like the next best option, but unfortunately adding it to your bee waterer has similar consequences. Honey can also contain a fatal bacterium. If a bee brings it back home, it could infect the whole hive. It’s best to stick with clean, fresh water and marbles.


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