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Bee Corridor

A bee corridor (also called a flower strip or bee path) links food sources and nesting habitats and improves pollination around your apiary. Well-designed corridors increase forage density, shorten flight distances and strengthen the health of honey bees and wild bees.

Our guidance helps you with planning, establishment and maintenance:

  • Site selection: A sunny, sheltered location with a continuous succession of blooms from spring through autumn.
  • Plant selection: Native, bee-friendly species such as clover, phacelia, sage, cornflower, sunflower and wild roses.
  • Width & design: Corridors 1–3 m wide are effective — as flower strips, hedges, rows of flowers or vegetated field margins.
  • Maintenance: No pesticides, staggered mowing to preserve late-season nectar, and gentle soil cultivation.
  • Water & nesting opportunities: Shallow water sources, deadwood and nesting aids for wild bees complement the habitat.

For beekeepers, a bee corridor is an ideal complement to technical equipment. After the honey harvest, reliable machines such as Logar honey extractors make processing the harvested honey easier. Combined with nature-friendly flowering areas, you not only increase honey yields but also the vitality of your colonies. Our tips are tailored to practical use and work well alongside Logar products.

Benefit from improved pollination, greater biodiversity and a stronger ecosystem around your apiary — and combine sustainable field design with proven beekeeping equipment such as Logar honey extractors.