- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Winter Olympics
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
Leaving Lawn for Bees
Posted on 2/26/26 at 2:51 pm
Posted on 2/26/26 at 2:51 pm
The first cut thread below had me wondering. Anyone leave any of their lawn standing for early emerging bees. I had a ton of of clover flowering in our yard and i left a big strip that is absolutely loaded with bees.
This is a big thing in northern states
This is a big thing in northern states
Posted on 2/26/26 at 3:43 pm to nolaks
I would if I had a lot of clover.
I enjoy looking at them with the kids.
I enjoy looking at them with the kids.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 4:13 pm to nolaks
I don’t have any clover, but I saw my first bee today at my bird bath drinking water. I have honeysuckle for the bees and hummingbirds.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 6:29 pm to nolaks
yes I leave almost 2 acres in clover. It adds nitrogen to soil, every herbivore eats it and as you said it attracts and feeds honeybees (and many other pollinators). Honestly my goal in life is to convert all 6 acres to be naturalized. I’m doing it bit by bit by planting trees that shade out the turf grass, letting clover go wild, building wildflower beds and planting wild grass seed. The latter is a bit more difficult as the birds get most of it
Posted on 2/26/26 at 8:35 pm to cgrand
Yeah, for bees. That's why my yard looks like that.
Posted on 2/27/26 at 3:01 am to nolaks
I make my backyard as pristine as possible to give my kids a good turf to play on.
The front yard I don't care about and have let nature do its thing. The drawback is that over the years, burweed has been brought in due to it being in the soccer fields where my kids' games were. I'm now having to fight that and the clover and aster will get caught in the crossfire.
I'm not worried because there are plenty of other resources around me for the bees to collect from as evidenced by my hives having fresh nectar last time I looked in them 2 months ago.
The front yard I don't care about and have let nature do its thing. The drawback is that over the years, burweed has been brought in due to it being in the soccer fields where my kids' games were. I'm now having to fight that and the clover and aster will get caught in the crossfire.
I'm not worried because there are plenty of other resources around me for the bees to collect from as evidenced by my hives having fresh nectar last time I looked in them 2 months ago.
Posted on 2/27/26 at 6:14 am to nolaks
I might not mow my back yard till April. It’s loaded in Heals All and I actually spread 50lbs of Crimson Clover last month. Gradually converting as much as I can to Yarrow and Ajuga.
I keep the edges trimmed.
I keep the edges trimmed.
Posted on 2/27/26 at 6:55 am to nolaks
I don't have much clover in my lawn. Haven't done my first cut yet, either. But my blueberry bushes are loaded with bees right now.
Posted on 2/27/26 at 7:13 am to nolaks
I keep bees and use to not give a damn about things like this. Now I feel like a full blown treehugger when I see people mowing down fields of henbit in early spring or goldenrod in fall. Don’t get me started on mosquito trucks.
Posted on 2/27/26 at 9:20 am to nolaks
Never thought about doing it for the bees, but I leave it for the kids all the time. They love going out there picking flowers, sitting in the clover and having a pretend picnic, building rock mounds, etc. Started doing this ever since we watched our first born have that cute struggle trying to walk through nearly waist high clover patches 
Posted on 2/28/26 at 7:01 pm to nolaks
I have never done this, but I also noticed a shitload of bees on clover in my yard today. I’ll probably just stagger the first mowing of each a week to keep them with some flowers.
Posted on 2/28/26 at 11:07 pm to nolaks
I got rid of a lawn years ago and have native wildflowers and grasses now. The amount of bees, etc is amazing.
Posted on 3/1/26 at 3:52 pm to nolaks
My mother-in-law has two hives down near our driveway. We live on an acre adjoining them. I cut mine this past week, but left about 2.5 acres uncut that is full of clovers and other wildflowers. We will cut the grass around the clover patches until mid April or cut every other patch. We throw wildflower seeds around the garden, near the hives, and at the base of some of the trees. I used to care way more about the appearance of my yard when it was smaller but it is too much work at this point, and I'm happy to just get it knocked down once a week. I minimize how much spray I use around the place as well.
Popular
Back to top
11












