Happiness is a butterfly, which when pursued, is always just beyond your grasp, but which, if you will sit down quietly, may alight upon you. --Nathaniel Hawthorne Maybe not "alight upon you," but stay long enough for you to admire it.
It hasn't been a good year for honey bees, no thanks to colony collapse disorder, but it has been a good year for the release of educational information. The latest edition of The Bee Health Update, a bimonthly newsletter which updates current activities around the Bee Health, eXtension.
The yellow-faced bumble bee (Bombus vosnesenskii) may be one of the most underappreciated pollinators. You see it buzzing around lavender, lupine, California poppies, mustard and other plants.
First it was the California poppies. Then the lupine. And now it's coreopsis, aka tickseed. It's seasonal blooming at the Campus Buzzway, a quarter-acre wildflower garden planted last fall at the Harry H. Laidlaw Jr. Honey Bee Research Facility on Bee Biology Road at UC Davis.
It was an aphid-kind of day. When a ladybug landed on a gaura in our bee friendly garden, it was business as usual. The business: eating aphids. The rose aphids sucking the plant juices from the tender shoot didn't last long. This is why ladybugs are known as "beneficial insects.