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Our Pollinator Paradise Flower Garden Layout is both beautiful and purposeful. This garden design focuses on open, native flowers that are easy for pollinators to access for a vibrant garden—like lavender, echinacea, and borage. Attract bees, butterflies, and hoverflies while providing colorful blooms from early spring to autumn!
This plan is part of our free Garden Plan Library, featuring tested layouts for vegetables, flowers, and mixed gardens. Each plan guides you on what to plant, when, and how—so you can grow with confidence and enjoy a steady supply of blooms for cutting or decorative purposes.
Approximately 16 x 16 feet (very adaptable, depending on central yard size)
Fun Fact
Not just bees! Butterflies, bats, beetles, flies, hummingbirds, and even moths are all pollinators.
The Pollinator Paradise Garden Plan
This pollinator garden layout includes common pollinator-friendly flowers in a variety of shapes, heights, and colors—from tubular foxgloves and lavender for long-tongued bees to flat-flowered yarrow and coneflowers for easier access. Blue, purple, and violet flowers are emphasized, as these colors are highly visible to pollinators and signal rich nectar sources.
Early-season blooms like crocus and pulmonaria help pollinators emerging from hibernation, while late-season plants like borage and dahlias sustain species flying into autumn. The center “lawn” is allowed to grow long, providing structural diversity with daisies and clover that supplement pollen and nectar for bees and hoverflies.
“I planted this pollinator garden in my backyard last spring and was amazed at the activity. Early in the season, I spotted bumblebees on the crocuses and hoverflies on the alyssum. By summer, lavender, echinacea, and foxgloves were buzzing constantly. The garden not only looked gorgeous but also felt alive—every day I saw new pollinators exploring different flowers.”
Above, a honey bee is foraging on a ‘Honka Fragile’ dahlia flower.A close-up of a bumblebee inside a foxglove flower!Busy bees pollinating English lavender.Another of the delicate dahlia, visited by a small tortoiseshell butterfly. Yarrow (Achillea millefolium) attracts beetles that are beneficial garden insects which eat aphids and other pestsPurple coneflowers attract pollinators like bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds.Borage is a powerful pollinator pull! It’s a fantastic companion in the garden, attracting honeybees and bumblebees.Poached Egg Plant (Limnanthes douglasii) is a wonderful companion plant, attracting pollinators. Pulmonaria, commonly called lungwort. Can you spot the flower bee?
FAQs for the Pollinator Garden Layout
Q: Do I need to plant native species only?
A: Native plants are preferred because local pollinators are adapted to them, but many non-invasive ornamental flowers like lavender or borage are also excellent nectar sources.
Q: Can I use this plan in a small backyard or container garden?
A: Yes! The plan is adaptable. Even a 6×6-foot area or large containers can support a variety of pollinators.
Q: How do I ensure flowers bloom all season?
A: Plant a combination of early, mid, and late bloomers. Succession sow or plant later-blooming species to maintain nectar and pollen throughout the year.
Q: Will this attract pests?
A: Pollinator gardens can attract some insects, but they also support beneficial species like hoverflies and ladybugs that help control pests naturally.
Wit & Wisdom
“The hum of bees is the voice of the garden.” – Elizabeth Lawrence.
Catherine Boeckmann is the Executive Digital Editor of Almanac.com, the website companion of The Old Farmer's Almanac. She covers gardening, plants, pest control, soil composition, seasonal and moon c...
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