Turn your backyard into a blooming, bee-friendly haven that supports honey bees, attracts native pollinators, and brings your garden to life from spring to fall.
The Bee-Friendly Backyard Garden is a practical beginner’s guide for anyone who wants to create a healthier, more beautiful outdoor space while helping bees and pollinators thrive. Whether you keep a hive, dream of starting one, or simply want a yard filled with flowers, butterflies, bees, and seasonal color, this book gives you a clear planting roadmap without confusion.
Do you want to help bees but feel unsure which plants actually provide nectar and pollen?
Have you planted flowers before, only to realize your garden blooms for a few weeks and then goes quiet?
Are you worried about using the wrong products, attracting fewer pollinators than expected, or creating a yard that looks pretty but does little for bees?
Do you want a low-stress pollinator garden that supports honey bees, native bees, butterflies, and your backyard ecosystem?
Many people want to “save the bees,” but a truly bee-friendly garden needs more than random flowers. Pollinators need continuous bloom, safe water, shelter, pesticide awareness, seasonal variety, and plants that actually feed them. Without a plan, your backyard can become beautiful but biologically empty.
This book helps you change that.
Inside, you will discover:
• How to design a pollinator-friendly yard even as a beginner
• The best flowers, herbs, shrubs, and trees to support honey bees and native pollinators
• How to create blooms from early spring through fall
• How to choose plants for sun, shade, containers, raised beds, and small spaces
• How to support backyard beekeeping with better forage
• Simple ways to provide water, shelter, and safer habitat
• Common pollinator garden mistakes to avoid
• Seasonal planting ideas, garden layouts, and practical checklists
Start building a backyard that looks beautiful, feeds pollinators, supports your hive or local bees, and gives you the joy of watching life return to your garden—one bloom at a time.