Coming Oct. 7: A Tour of Kate Frey's Bee-utiful Garden

Oct 4, 2017

"When's the next public tour of Kate Frey's garden?"

That's a question we're often asked and now we have an answer: Saturday, Oct. 7.

World-class bee garden designer and pollinator advocate Kate Frey, co-author of The Bee-Friendly Garden" (with UC San Francisco professor Gretchen LeBuhn), is inviting folks to join her to "see the principles and practices of the American Garden School expressed and demonstrated" in her unique pollinator garden in Hopland, inland Mendocino County.

A workshop from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. will cover design, site preparation, building health soil, weed control, bees and wildlife in the garden, plant care, and will look at some recommended plant varieties. It will end with an irrigation system demonstration. The cost is $35 for the workshop.

If you want to attend the garden tour, it's from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. The cost is $10, and participants are invited to bring their lunch.

Frey was recently part of a Hopland workshop on native bees that featured UC Berkeley entomology professor Gordon Frankie,  and entomologist-photographer Roland Coville, two of the co-authors of California Bees and Blooms: A Guide for Gardeners and Naturalists. (Other co-authors of Bees and Blooms: Robbin Thorp, distinguished emeritus professor of entomology at UC Davis) and Barbara Ertter, UC Berkeley botanist.) At the conference, Frey guided a tour of her garden, renowned for its floristic diversity, color and wildlife habitats.

Worldwide, there are 20,000 species of bees. Of that number, 4000 are found in the United States, and 1600 of them in California. A good many of them are found in the UC Berkeley Urban Gardens (see UC Berkeley Urban Bee Lab and in the Frey garden!

The Frey gardens include floral borders, a vegetable garden, unique rustic structures and whimsical art (the work and/or collection of husband Ben), a chicken palace and more. With the Swiss chalet home, this is straight out of a storybook! Indeed, visitors call it an "instant sanctuary," says Kate. They marvel at the beauty, the color, and the paths just begging to be explored. A feast for the eyes; serenity for the soul.

You can register on the American Garden School site.  Directions are posted online.