AHL1 - Pollen and Nectar Flower Mix
Payment
You’ll receive £739 per hectare per year.
Aim
This action aims to create a pollen and nectar flower mix that produces flowering plants from late spring through the summer months. The purpose of this is to:
- Provide food for beneficial pollinators, such as bumble bees, solitary bees, butterflies, and hoverflies.
- Encourage natural crop pest predators as part of an IPM approach if located close to cropped areas.
Where You Can Do This Action
You can do this action on eligible agricultural land located below the moorland line. The table below sets out what land is eligible for AHL1.
Table 26: Eligible land for AHL1
Eligible land type | Eligible land use code | Compatible land cover |
---|---|---|
Arable land, including temporary grassland | Arable crops | Arable land |
Leguminous and nitrogen-fixing crops | Arable land | |
FA01 | Arable land | |
TG01 | Arable land | |
Permanent crops – horticultural | TC01 | Permanent crops |
The glossary (annex C) explains what we mean by land types, land use codes and compatible land covers.
The SFI application service will automatically calculate what area may be eligible for this action in each land parcel. This is called the ‘SFI available area’. You must check this area is an eligible land type. Find out how the SFI available area is calculated in the information on land that’s eligible for the SFI actions (section 4.1.2).
You can apply for this action on either the total SFI available area in each land parcel shown in your SFI application, or part of that area. However, this action is normally intended to be done on part of a land parcel as a block or strip.
For SFI applications submitted on or after 26 March 2024, this is a ‘limited area’ action. The total eligible area you enter into any combination of one or more of the ‘limited area’ actions must not be more than 25% of the total agricultural area of your farm.
Read the guidance on ‘SFI actions with an area limit’ (at the start of section 2) for more information and a list of the ‘limited area’ SFI actions.
This action is rotational. You can do this action on the same area of eligible land for the duration of your 3-year SFI agreement, or you can move the area each year.
Other Land Management Actions or Options You Can Do on the Same Area as AHL1
The table below sets out which other SFI actions, CS management options, ES revenue options and SFI pilot standards can be located on the same eligible area within a land parcel as AHL1.
Table 27: Actions or options that can be located on the same area within a land parcel as AHL1
Scheme | Action or option codes that can be located on the same area as AHL1 |
---|---|
SFI 2023 | SAM1, IPM1, NUM1 |
CS | OR3, OR4, OR5, OT3, OT4, OT5, SW17 |
ES | No ES revenue options |
SFI pilot | No area-based SFI pilot standards |
Use the CS grant finder to search for the CS option codes shown above.
The SFI actions for hedgerows (HRW1, HRW2 and HRW3), CS option BE3 and the introductory level of the SFI pilot hedgerows standard can be done on the eligible boundaries of a land parcel entered into AHL1.
If an action or option cannot be located on the same area within a land parcel as AHL1, this is because it’s not an eligible land type, or the activities are incompatible, or you would be paid twice for doing the same activities on the same land. In this case, that area will be automatically removed from the affected land parcel’s SFI available area in your SFI application.
If this is the case, you may be able to do the action on a different area in the same land parcel if:
- it’s an eligible land type for the action or option
- it’s a part-parcel action or option
- the area used for the action or option does not overlap with the area used for AHL1
Read the information about eligibility of land used for other schemes and funding sources (section 4.2) to find out more.
What To Do
You must establish and maintain blocks or strips of pollen and nectar flower mix on land entered into this action.
To establish the blocks or strips of pollen and nectar flower mix, you must sow a grass-free seed mix containing at least 6 flower species. A single species must not exceed 50% of the total seed mix by weight.
As a minimum, the grass-free seed mix must include at least 2 of the following, all of which can provide pollen and nectar from late spring and over the summer months and are suitable to be grown in all regions of England:
- Common knapweed
- Musk mallow
- Oxeye daisy
- Wild carrot
- Yarrow
Once established, you must maintain the blocks or strips of pollen and nectar mix. To do this, you must manage them in a way that could reasonably be expected to achieve this action’s aim.
You must not do the following on the blocks or strips of pollen and nectar mix once they’re established:
- cut or graze them with livestock in a way that means this action’s aim cannot reasonably be achieved
- apply any fertilisers or manures
- use pesticides, except for herbicides to weed wipe or spot treat for the control of injurious weeds, invasive non-native species, nettles or bracken
You can maintain existing blocks or strips of pollen and nectar flower mix to meet this action if they:
- meet the requirements explained above
- are not already being paid for under another environmental land management scheme option, such as CS option AB1 (nectar flower mix)
When to Do It
If you’re doing this action on the same area of land for the 3-year duration of your SFI agreement, you must:
- establish the blocks or strips of pollen and nectar flower mix during the first 12 months of your SFI agreement
- maintain the blocks or strips of pollen and nectar flower mix on the same area of land in each subsequent year of your 3-year SFI agreement
If you’re rotating this action around your farm, each year of your SFI agreement you must do it for a period of time that could reasonably be expected to achieve this action’s aim.
How to Do It
It’s up to you how you complete this action, as long as you do it in a way that can reasonably be expected to achieve this action’s aim.
You may find it helpful to read the voluntary guidance on how to establish and maintain blocks or strips of pollen and nectar flower mix, but you do not have to follow it.
What Evidence to Keep
You should keep evidence to show what you’ve done to complete this action. This will help if it’s not clear that you’ve completed the action in a way that could reasonably be expected to achieve this action’s aim. You must supply this evidence if we ask for it.
This evidence could include photographs and other documentation to show what you’ve done to complete this action. It could also include field operations at a land parcel level and associated invoices. If you choose to take photographs, read the guidance on how to take photographic evidence (annex A).
Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Source: SFI Handbook for the SFI 2023 Offer