Wild Bee Stewardship at the Botanical Garden of the Piedmont
Pollinator habitats come in all sizesβfrom school gardens and backyard spaces to public parks and evolving community landscapes. Every habitat plays a role in helping wild bees and other pollinators find the food, shelter, and nesting space they need.
The Botanical Garden of the Piedmont welcomes all to experience its core values of connection, learning, and joy through nature. Its 14.74-acre site serves as a free, accessible green oasis where community, education, and conservation unite.
Discover Wild Bees Here
Wild bees do not make honey or live in large hives. They donβt have a queen to defend and rarely sting. Instead, they nest alone in hollow stems, reeds, and openable bee housesβmaking them safe to observe and perfect for hands-on learning environments.
There are more than 4,000 bee species in the United States. Many are solitary bees that pollinate native plants, gardens, farms, and natural landscapesβhelping to keep ecosystems healthy.
Raising Wild Bees Is Easier Than You Think
Most wild bees donβt make honey or live in hivesβand they donβt require gear or special equipment. All they need are safe nesting materials, flowers to forage, and pesticide-free spaces.
Families, schools, parks, and nature programs can all help support pollinator conservationβright where they live, learn, and explore.
Fun fact: One Mason bee can pollinate as many flowers as 100 honey bees!
Why Wild Bees Matter
They pollinate more efficiently. Wild bees deposit pollen with nearly every flower visit, increasing pollination of both crops and native plants.
They support healthy ecosystems. Wild bees help plants grow, which protects soil, supports wildlife, and improves habitat diversity.
Wild bees are active for only part of the year. The rest of the time, they grow as larvae, form cocoons, and hibernate until spring or summer.
Hereβs a look at the Mason bee lifecycle:
You Can Help!
You donβt need a large space to make an impact. Even a small garden, nature trail, or community education project can support pollinators.
- Plant native flowers that bloom across seasons.
- Leave natural stems and leaf litter for nesting.
- Avoid pesticides and herbicides that harm bees.
- Use openable nesting materials for safe annual cocoon care.
- Learn which bees live near you: Where the Wild Bees Are
About the Botanical Garden of the Piedmont
The Botanical Garden of the Piedmont in Central Virginia welcomes all to experience the restorative power of nature. As a free, accessible green oasis, it combines beauty, community, and discovery in its evolving landscape.
With trails, habitats, open green spaces, and hands-on exploration, the garden provides opportunities to reflect, observe, and imagine its future as a place for recreation, meditation, conservation, and connection. Free programs for all ages foster awareness, curiosity, and stewardship.
Support Wild Bees with Purpose-Built Habitats
Bee houses offer long-term habitat for wild bees, allowing schools, parks, gardens, and community groups to observe, learn, and support natural pollination.
Rewild Refuge Bee House
Perfect for parks, education centers, and conservation spaces that support observation, stewardship, and habitat learning. Shop Rewild Refuge here.
DIY Build a Bee House
Great for classrooms, camps, workshops, and family learning events. Build, place, observe, and support wild bees. Shop DIY Bee House here.
About Crown Bees: Based in Washington state, Crown Bees partners with gardens, parks, schools, and conservation groups to raise awareness and provide science-based tools for supporting wild, cavity-nesting bees. Weβre buzzing to be collaborating on this pollinator project.
Weβre Here to Help You BEE Successful
- Getting Started Guide
- BeeMail Newsletter
- If you have direct questions, email info@crownbees.com
