Dutton Island Gardeners

Dutton Island Gardeners A community garden located at 96 Dutton Island Road near Donner Community Center in Atlantic Beach, FL. Email [email protected] for more info!

Beaches Habitat in collaboration with the City of Atlantic Beach, FL helped created this community garden. Dig Local Network took over the garden care and up keep

03/30/2026

Come on out to Beaches Go Green’s Go Green Drinks Jax event tomorrow evening at Ink Factory Brewing to meet some of the community gardeners of Dig Local and other local eco-minded community members!

MARCH PANELISTS:

Sara Fagen with Eco Eclectic

Sherry Carpenter with Keep Florida Beautiful

Kira Mauro with Dig Local

Dryden Mills with St. Johns Riverkeeper

HOSTED BY: Beaches Go Green

https://m.signupgenius.com/?fbclid=IwRlRTSAQ35KJleHRuA2FlbQIxMABzcnRjBmFwcF9pZAo2NjI4NTY4Mzc5AAEeR8JOLaxZleGKzk3yvhoT9Okp-_VW3SE4L0PT2EiSAAQu0p4zIBva4wsBdFM_aem_D_zRJV3oZUXMkyEhb9OIfA #!/showRSVPSignUp/8050D4DA9AF2CA1F58-61988367-gogreen

Volunteers needed to help build raised beds for the community, for the next two Saturdays at Eartha’s Farm!
03/16/2026

Volunteers needed to help build raised beds for the community, for the next two Saturdays at Eartha’s Farm!

⚠️ UPDATE! ⚠️
We’re so sorry for the short notice, but we’ve had fewer sign-ups than we anticipated, so we’re shifting the construction of the raised beds in our Community Garden to next Saturday, March 21st, and then again on the following Saturday, March 28th. We apologize for any inconveniences.

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🎉 Exciting news! We’re starting our ‘Grow & Nourish Program’, thanks to the Florida Department of Health in Duval County .health 🙏🏽

Our ‘Grow & Nourish Program’ will teach you all about growing, planting, and harvesting your own produce, plus how to prepare delicious meals in the kitchen with our culinary arts instructor! 👩🏾‍🍳

To get the program off the ground, we’re on the lookout for volunteers next Saturday March 21st, and again on the following Saturday, March 28th to help us build raised garden beds in our Community Garden!

Come join us in laying the groundwork for a community garden that will be here for years to come - ensuring food security, promoting environmental stewardship, wellness and most importantly, helping our community!

Sign up in our Volunteer link (“Volunteer with the Farm Team”) in our bio! 👆🏽

💚 These beds are sponsored by the Duval County Department of Health.

A rare chance in Florida to see how Frost W**d got its common name! What a beautiful phenomenon 🌱❤️
02/03/2026

A rare chance in Florida to see how Frost W**d got its common name! What a beautiful phenomenon 🌱❤️

This cold spell may interrupt your garden plans, but February ushers in a lovely spring planting season for north Florid...
01/30/2026

This cold spell may interrupt your garden plans, but February ushers in a lovely spring planting season for north Florida. We’re looking forward to the bright green of fresh peas, lettuces and turnip tops 🌱❤️

Don’t give up your gardening New Year’s resolutions yet! Throw on that sweater because there are tons of great edible plants that can go in the ground this month.

For the text and printable PDF versions of this infographic, visit UF/IFAS Gardening Solutions: https://gardeningsolutions.ifas.ufl.edu/infographics-collection/what-to-plant-in-february/

January planting guides from IFAS and the Florida Master Gardeners 🌱❤️
01/08/2026

January planting guides from IFAS and the Florida Master Gardeners 🌱❤️

There are many types of flowers that can be planted during Florida’s winter. If you want some pleasant blooms to enjoy, these species are ideal for the season.

*Generally, if planting at the beginning of the season, you can plant by seed. If planting towards the end, you can use transplants. However, each plant varies in its success as a transplant or seed, so check with your local county UF/IFAS Extension agent for more information on planting in your area. https://go.ufl.edu/Extension

For the printable PDF and text version of this infographic, visit UF/IFAS Gardening Solutions. https://gardeningsolutions.ifas.ufl.edu/infographics-collection/flowers-to-plant-in-january/

Fantastic rundown on how to support Florida’s incredible native bee populations 🐝 ❤️
01/08/2026

Fantastic rundown on how to support Florida’s incredible native bee populations 🐝 ❤️

Welcome Florida’s Native Bees Into Your Yard by Laura Langlois Zurro

Florida is home to more than 300 of the 4,000 bee species found across North America — including 29 species found nowhere else in the world. Unlike the highly social but non-native honey bees that live in hives, most native bees live solitary lives, and the majority of them nest in the ground.

Native bees are considered a keystone species and are critical for maintaining healthy ecosystems by providing pollination services essential for plant reproduction.

They also play an essential role in crop pollination. If you enjoy blueberries, cucumbers, pumpkins, raspberries or tomatoes – thank native bees for their role in pollinating these foods.

They are all around us – in yards, natural areas, roadside strips, empty lots, and beaches – yet they go mostly unnoticed. They’ve been here for centuries, long before the honey bee was imported to North America by the first European settlers. Unfortunately, like too many native species, Florida’s native bees are threatened by habitat loss and degradation, urban and suburban land development, agriculture, and pesticides.

But gardeners can play an active role in helping them survive by simply adapting their landscaping and lawn practices to meet their needs.

Species Diversity

Unlike non-native honey bees, Florida’s bees are amazingly diverse with six primary families — Andrenidae, Apidae, Colletidae, Halictidae, Megachilidae, and Melittidae. Even within those families, there is tremendous diversity not just within families but within species. They come in all:

Sizes — smaller than a grain of rice up to the width of a quarter

Colors — blue/gray, red and black, yellow, orange and black, metallic green, iridescent black, and more

Fuzziness — from wasp-like with almost no hair to extra fuzziness and

Shapes — from round to long and slender to extra bulky.
Even beyond those distinctions, males and females often exhibit s*xual differences resulting in some species varying widely in color, shape, and body size based on their s*x.
The Importance of Pollen and Nectar

Bees evolved to feed on nectar and pollen. Nectar is rich in sugar, carbohydrates, protein and amino acids. The length of the bee’s tongue plays a role in determining which flower shapes bees can feed on (e.g., flat vs. tubular). Some species, such as sweat bees or leafcutter bees, have short tongues and nectar from flat flowers, while bumblebees have long tongues and prefer tubular shapes.

Pollen is the primary source of protein for bees, particularly for growing larva. Adult females also consume pollen at different times in their life cycle. Bees have evolved to collect pollen on specialized structures called scopa, but how they collect pollen differs. Bumblebees (and non-native honey bees) collect pollen in specialized structures called corbiculae, or pollen baskets, located on their back legs. Other species, such as sweat bees, collect pollen on sticky scopal hairs found on their back legs, while leafcutter bees have scopal brushes located on the underside of their abdomens. Some bees, notably in the Hylaeus family, carry pollen internally.

One type of bee doesn’t even collect pollen – these cleptoparasitic or cuckoo bees are more wasp-like in appearance and lack pollen-collecting hairs. Instead of building nests, they parasitize the nests of other bees by sneaking in when the host is away, laying one or more eggs, and then slipping away. When the egg hatches, it will kill the host larva and eat the pollen.

Nest Behavior

Not all bees nest in hives, in fact, about 80% of the world’s bees live solitary lives, and about 70% of them nest in the ground. Nests often have a raised cone of sand or dirt around the entrance and a small bee-sized hole in the center (typically about the diameter of a wooden pencil). In Florida’s sugar-sand, sometimes it’s just a hole in the ground with no evident soil mound.

Some solitary bee species, such as Colletes, nest in large groups composed of hundreds of individual nests. Female sweat bees practice semi-social nesting behavior with apartment-style nests where they share a common entrance with attached tunnels leading to separate nesting chambers. Although these nests may temporarily change the look of a lawn or garden, they will disappear after a couple of weeks, leaving no trace that they were there.

Approximately 30% of solitary bees don’t nest in the ground. These bees use hollow plant stems, pithy plants, rotting wood, beetle cavities in wood, and some build suspended nests out of resin and pebbles.

Leafcutter bee nesting behavior varies among species —some nest in the ground, others in cavities or tunnels. Most species line their nest cells with small semi-circular pieces of leaves that they cut with their mandibles, but a few also use flower petals. If you find plants with neat semi-circles missing from leaves or petals, it could be evidence of leafcutter bees. The cuts won’t harm the plants.

Bumblebees are social bees and live in colonies as large as 400 bees. They have an annual life cycle, and each year new queens create new colonies. Bumblebees mainly nest in old rodent burrows or clumps of dried grass, but nests can be found in abandoned bird nests and even furniture. Because the new queens hibernate underground, occasionally they can be dug up during Spring gardening – if you find a hibernating queen, cover her back up.

Now that we know a bit about the secret lives of Florida’s native bees, it’s time to learn how to create a habitat that supports them.

Think Like A Bee

Take a walk through your yard and think like a bee. Are there food sources? Are they easily located? Is there an abundance of flowers in one place, or do you have to fly from section to section just to find flowers? Are they the right color? Is there enough variety and can you access the nectar or pollen easily? Will there be flowers for you no matter what time of year you emerge (Spring, early Summer, late Summer)?

Are there places to nest? If you nest in the ground, can you access the ground, or is there mulch or w**d cloth blocking your way? If you nest in stems, are there any available? Will your babies be able to emerge when they are ready to leave the nest? If you’re a male bee, will you have a place to call home as well?

Will you come in contact with pesticides either on the flowers you’re eating, as you move through the plants, or as you create your nests in the ground or other locations?

The following steps can take you from thinking like a bee to providing a safe habitat for bees:

Step 1: What’s On The Menu

Creating a truly bee-friendly garden requires seeing flowers from a bee’s perspective. The best way to fulfill those needs is to go native and choose wildflowers, and flowering vines, shrubs, and trees. Limit hybrids, cultivars and double-petal flowers that often don’t supply enough nutrients.

Choose white, yellow, or blue-violet flowers because they are more attracted to those colors. Flower size and shape are also important. Plant flat aster-type flowers for short-tongued bees, tubular flowers for long-tongued bees and tiny flowers for the small bees that don’t travel more than a couple of hundred feet from their nests.

Plant in groupings so bees can move easily from flower to flower and plan to have at least three species flowering at all times of the year to accommodate the bees that emerge in different seasons. Once you have planted your garden, try not to disturb it and the nests that bees may have built near their new food source.

What if you don’t have the space to plant directly in the ground or you rent a home or apartment? Don’t let that deter you. Bees don’t care if the flowers they visit are in the ground or a pot – as long as their needs are met, they will use those plants.

Although there are thousands of flowering plant species across Florida, these ten flowering plants are reliably attractive to bees. Check location, soil type, and moisture levels before making a final choice:

Goldenrod (Solidago species)
Asters (Chrysopsis species)
Blanketflower (avoid cultivars and look for Gaillardia pulchella)
Dune sunflower (Helianthus debilis)
Spotted bee-balm (Monarda punctata)
Beggerticks/Spanish needles (Bidens alba)
Snow squarestem (Melanthera nivea)
Sunshine mimosa (Mimosa strigillosa)
Turkey tangle fog fruit (Phyla nodiflora)
African blue basil
Step 2: A Place to Call Home

Most ground-nesting bees prefer to nest in sandy areas in full sun, but some species will nest in silty or loamy soils. Skip the mulch and w**d cloth, and use pine straw which is loose and allows access to and from the nest. Leave some patches of soil untilled to avoid digging up nests. And if you encounter a suspected nest, avoid stepping on it because the bee will need to locate it and dig the entrance open again when it returns.

Stem-nesting bees also need safe places to nest. Providing them is as easy as leaving plants with hollow or pithy stems standing for at least a year, preferably two. Once the stems are dry, it may still take a bit of time for the bees to discover them and start nesting; leaving them as long as possible will allow the bees to find the dried stems and make their new homes.

Ten plants that can meet the needs of stem-nesting bees are:

Raspberries (Rubus species)
Goldenrod (Solidago)
Swamp milkw**d (Asclepias incarnata)
Dune sunflower (Helianthus)
Blazing star (Liatris)
Thistles (Cirsium)
Bee balm (Monarda punctata)
Elderberry (Sambucus)
Roses (Rosa)
Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum)
If you must cut stems back, be sure to leave 12″-18″ of stem standing. If it is possible, cut the stems very short and then place them in a protected nearby area, away from rain or flooding during storms where they can still be used as habitat.

Another reason to leave some stems standing: Male bees don’t return to the nest once they’ve emerged, but they still need a place to sleep (a.k.a. roost). They can often be found in the evenings or early mornings under aster-type flower heads or clasping the stems of dried-out flower stems with their mandibles. Sometimes males nest in large aggregations of up to 40 or 50 bees. Many male bees geo-locate to the same stem night after night.

Step 3: Host A Bee-Friendly Lawn

Most lawns are ecological deserts for bees, and with millions of acres of lawns across Florida, even the smallest change can offer big rewards (and will be more sustainable). Rather than mow every week, try to reduce mowing to every second or third week. This will allow small flowers to grow between the grass, providing both food and hiding spots for bees, particularly tiny bees. Spring is the perfect time to do this as wildflowers (e.g., fleabane, spiderwort and coreopsis) pop up in lawns everywhere and provide a great food source for newly emerging bees. Another option is to plant low-growing bee-friendly groundcovers instead of grass – sunshine mimosa or turkey tangle fogfruit are great options. And if you have space, consider converting a small patch of lawn to wildflowers or native grasses.

Step 4: Skip Pesticides

Limit the use of pesticides in your garden and landscape. However benign a product might seem, it can be detrimental to bees, causing immediate death or neurological damage. Insecticides, herbicides and fungicides don’t affect just the target species; they impact your entire ecosystem. The chemicals can leach into the nests of ground-nesting bees. Bees can also ingest pesticides by feeding on plants that have been sprayed or treated with chemical drenches. Even pesticides labeled as organic or safe for bees (e.g., neem oil, soaps or vinegar sprays) can harm bees if they drift onto flowers, the bees themselves, or are carried back to their nests.

Spread the Awareness

Saving Florida’s native bees starts with the awareness that they exist. Now that you know how important they are and what they need to survive, it’s time to get outside and start looking for them. And *bee* sure to let others know about these small but essential denizens of our yards and gardens.

Further Reading:

The Bees in Your Backyard by Joseph Wilson and Olivia Carrill

Bee Basics: An Introduction to Native Bees

Florida Native Bees Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/share/g/16qUKFjUXV/?mibextid=wwXIfr

To find a native plant nursery, visit PlantRealFlorida org

Laura Langlois Zurro is the founder of the Florida Native Bees Facebook group. A passionate advocate for Florida’s native bee species, she devotes much of her time to promoting bees in the local community and through social media. She can be found most days in her garden or local protected areas with her camera in hand, documenting bee behavior through observations, photos, and videos to create visual stories that will inspire awareness about native bees.

Original article published in Tampa Bay surrounding environmental newsletter. Resource for printing below 👇🏽 💬

Photos descriptions

A STELIS BEE NECTARS ON A CHAYA, WHICH IS USUALLY GROWN FOR HUMAN FOOD.

A DIANTHIDIUM BEE WITH A GAILLARDIA, WHICH IS CONSISTENTLY A FAVORITE FOR NATIVE BEES.

ONE OF THE MANY SPECIES OF METALLIC GREEN SWEAT BEES ON A BLUEBERRY FLOWER.

A FEMALE HALICTUS CONCENTRATES GOLDENROD NECTAR BETWEEN HER MANDIBLES.

A GROUND-NESTING AGAPOSTEMON SPLENDENS EMERGES FROM ITS SANDY SLEEPING SPOT.

MELISSODES MALES ROOST ON A DRY STEM OF BIDENS ALBA, A FAVORITE PLANT FOR NECTAR, POLLEN AND HABITAT.

NATIVE BEES EVOLVED WITH NATIVE PLANTS. HERE, ONE OF THE MANY LEAFCUTTER BEE SPECIES FEEDS FROM A STOKE’S ASTER.

DEPENDING ON THE SPECIES, MEGACHILE BEES MAY NEST IN STEMS, AS WELL AS THE BOTTOM OF GROWER POTS, IN THE GROUND OR IN TREE CAVITIES.

A SPECODES, ANOTHER CUCKOO BEE, ON FLEABANE, A NATIVE PLANT THAT OFTEN POPS UP IN LAWNS IN THE SPRING.

Mountain: moved. We really missed out on the opportunity to make a timelapse video here 😅Many thanks to plotholder Matth...
10/30/2025

Mountain: moved. We really missed out on the opportunity to make a timelapse video here 😅

Many thanks to plotholder Matthew for his dedication to getting this mulch pile into the garden ASAP!

10/29/2025
Volunteers wanted for the Jarboe Park Butterfly Garden beautification project this Saturday and Sunday! 🦋 ❤️
10/17/2025

Volunteers wanted for the Jarboe Park Butterfly Garden beautification project this Saturday and Sunday! 🦋 ❤️

Calling all volunteers! 📢 Ahead of the Jarboe Park Butterfly Garden Ribbon Cutting on Monday, we're looking for volunteers to help us beautify the garden this Saturday & Sunday, Oct. 18-19 from 4pm-6pm. Come learn about the garden with Blake West, our City Project Manager and City Arborist, who designed and built the garden. 🦋

Our monthly Open House and community workday was a blast!  Today’s fall weather made for a perfect gardening day as our ...
10/12/2025

Our monthly Open House and community workday was a blast! Today’s fall weather made for a perfect gardening day as our plotholders did some seasonal cleanup and flipped the compost piles.

Do you live in or near Atlantic Beach and want a place to drop off your compostable waste? Swing by the Dutton Island Garden and toss it directly into one of the active piles! We accept kitchen scraps and yard material- just nothing containing plastic or pet waste.

Florida Friendly gardening practices are applicable not only to ornamental home landscapes, but to edible landscaping as...
09/21/2025

Florida Friendly gardening practices are applicable not only to ornamental home landscapes, but to edible landscaping as well!

Mulching and the use of natively planted spaces to support local pollinators are two of our favorite practices in the community garden. What are yours?

As you work towards your cool season garden plans, keep the 9 Florida-Friendly Landscaping Principles in mind. These principles, aimed at reducing irrigation needs and protecting the quality of our water resources from overuse and misuse of fertilizers and pesticides don't just apply to ornamental landscapes, but to the edible landscape as well. UF Florida-Friendly Landscaping Program

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96 Dutton Island Road West
Atlantic Beach, FL

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