
Quick facts
Having a variety of flower types can attract more pollinators
Plants flowering at different times of the year provide more opportunity for pollinators
Many insects are attracted to yellow and purple colours
The planting plan
James Lawrence, RHS Principal Horticultural Advisor, has designed this simple, attractive, and most importantly, sustainable border design, which you can try at home with purple- and yellow-flowered plants that are easy to grow, widely available and look good together.

Choosing plants for pollinators
Pollinating insects are in decline, but there are plenty of flowering plants to help them. Increasing flowering plants in our gardens can also improve fruit and vegetables: with more pollinating insects around, harvests can be bigger and better.
The Campanula provides some ground cover and will help prevent erosion of bare soil. Ground cover plants can also help to reduce soil surface moisture evaporation and suppress weed growth.
Until the plants have filled out, an organic mulch, preferably homemade compost, can help to improve soil moisture retention and weed suppression. Mulches should be spread when the soil is already moist to help trap some of that moisture before it dries out in summer.





1-Buddleja davidii 'Nanho Purple' is a shrub with grey-green leaves and fragrant red-purple flowers packed into dense cone-shaped panicles in summer and autumn, which are a magnet for butterflies.
2-Stachyurus praecox is a deciduous shrub with stunning strings of pale yellow, bell-shaped flowers in winter and early spring.
3-Salvia nemorosa ‘Caradonna’ is a herbaceous with spikes of deep violet-purple flowers rising above narrow, rough grey-green foliage throughout the summer.
4-Euphorbia x martinihas evergreen grey-green leaves and open sprays of yellow-green flowers, sometimes with a purple eye, from mid-spring into summer.
5-Campanula carpatica is a low-growing herbaceous plant, with green leaves and bright, sky-blue, bell-shaped flowers through the summer.
About plants for pollinators
Using scientific evidence, our extensive experience and the records of gardeners and beekeepers, we’ve selected a range of year-round flowering Plants for Pollinators to tackle the decline in pollinator numbers. Visit our Plants for Pollinators page to discover more of the best plants for attracting pollinators.
Growing plants for pollinators
Many insects are suffering from a lack of pollinator-friendly plants in the countryside to provide nectar and pollen. By offering a good range of pollinator friendly plants in our gardens, we can help these essential creatures to thrive. Increasing is also benefical for encouraging a healthy garden ecosystem in general.
Choose plants with a variety of different flower types and structures in order to attract a wider range of pollinators across the seasons. A succession of overlapping flowering times ensures there is always something available.
Why choose a sustainable planting combination?
Using the ethos of ‘right plant, right place’ to create a sustainable planting combination is great for the environment. It helps avoid waste and the use of products and practices needed to try and help ailing plants, such as the application of fertiliser. It also creates robust, long-lived planting that benefits soil health and garden . For more information about sustainable gardening, please see the RHS Sustainability Strategy.
This combination will also attract more pollinating insects into the garden, creating better diversity by in turn encouraging birds and other wildlife into the garden.



