AB1: Nectar flower mix - GOV.UK
Contents
- How much will be paid
- Where to use this option
- Where this option cannot be used
- How this option will benefit the environment
- Aims
- Prohibited activities
- Recommended management
- Keeping records
- Additional guidance and advice
- Pick the right location
- Block and plot sizes
- What to sow
- How to sow
- Management
- Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
- Biodiversity
- Further information
How much will be paid
£739 per hectare (ha)
Where to use this option
Available for Countryside Stewardship Mid Tier and Higher Tier
- Whole or part parcel
- Rotational
Only on:
-
arable land
-
temporary grass
-
bush orchards
Where this option cannot be used
- On organic land or on land in conversion to organic status
How this option will benefit the environment
It provides areas of flowering plants to boost essential food sources for beneficial pollinators such as bumble bees, solitary bees, butterflies and hoverflies.
Aims
If you’re selected for a site visit, we will check that delivery of the aims is being met and the prohibited activities have not been carried out. This will ensure the environmental benefits are being delivered.
Establish in blocks or strips between 1 March and 15 September by sowing a grass-free seed mix which contains a minimum of 6 flower species. At least 2 of these must be from the following list.
- Common knapweed
- Musk mallow
- Oxeye daisy
- Wild carrot
- Yarrow
Once established in the first year, the seed mix, will provide a supply of pollen and nectar rich flowers.
Management will ensure there is sustained flowering throughout the spring and summer.
In the winter the whole plot of flowering plants will be cut or grazed, and the dead material removed, in preparation for regrowth during the spring.
Prohibited activities
To achieve the aims and deliver the environmental benefits, do not carry out any of the following activities:
On your annual claim you will be asked to declare that you have not carried out any prohibited activities.
Recommended management
To assist you in achieving the aims and deliver the environmental benefits for this option, we recommend that you use best practice.
In the first 12 months after sowing you can regularly cut, to help the sown species to establish.
You then manage established nectar flower mix plots as follows.
Remove or shred cuttings to prevent weed ingress and patches of dead material developing.
Keeping records
Where there’s uncertainty about whether or not the aims of the options have been delivered, we will take into account any records or evidence you may have kept to demonstrate delivery of the aims of the option. This will include any steps you’ve taken to follow the recommended management set out above. It’s your responsibility to keep such records if you want to rely on these to support your claim.
- Seed invoices
- Field operations at the parcel level, including associated invoices
- Stock records to show grazing activity on parcels in particular to cover the period where grazing is prohibited.
- Photographs of the established mixture
Additional guidance and advice
The following advice is helpful, but they are not requirements for this item.
Pick the right location
Use lower-yielding areas with a sunny aspect, facing south or south-southwest.
Avoid planting under overhanging trees, next to tall hedges or on land facing north or east. Leave access to surrounding crops to allow for management.
Block and plot sizes
Use wide margins and big blocks between 0.25ha and 0.5ha. This lets insects move to safety when fields are being sprayed.
Spacing five 0.5ha patches evenly within 100ha meets the food needs of many pollinators.
What to sow
A seed mix which contains both shorter-lived legumes and longer-lived wild flower species delivers an extended supply of pollen and nectar from late spring through to the autumn for beneficial insects such as bees, butterflies, hoverflies and moths.
You can sow the following example mix on a range of soil types.
Flower species |
% inclusion rate |
Alsike clover |
10 |
Bird’s-foot trefoil |
10 |
Black medick |
5 |
Common vetch |
40 |
Early flowering red clover |
10 |
Late flowering red clover |
10 |
Lucerne |
5 |
Sweet clover |
5 |
Common knapweed |
1.5 |
Musk mallow |
1 |
Oxeye daisy |
1 |
Wild carrot |
1 |
Yarrow |
0.5 |
Total |
100 |
Sow the seed mix at 15 kg/ha.
On light free draining soils you can replace common vetch with sainfoin.
Avoid short-term mixes that do not include knapweed or mallow as they will not supply pollinators with long-term food sources for years 4 and 5 of the agreement.
How to sow
Sow by broadcasting seeds rather than drilling, when the soil is warm and moist. Use a ring roll before and after sowing. Check regularly for slug damage.
Management
Cut emerging flowers and weeds at least twice in year 1, and up to 4 times if necessary where the soil is particularly fertile. Regular cutting prevents weeds smothering the slow-growing flowers so all sown species can establish successfully.
Plots may be grazed between 1 September and 14 March, but make sure that no poaching or soil compaction by livestock takes place. Supplementary feeding could result in poaching and soil compaction, so should be avoided.
Remember you must keep nectar plots until at least 31 December in year 5 of the agreement.
Integrated Pest Management (IPM)
This option can form part of an IPM approach to prevent the establishment of pests, weeds and diseases. If successful, appropriate and within proximity of cropped areas, these may limit the need for the use of Plant Protection Products and enhance wildlife and biodiversity on your holding. Read information on IPM at AHDB (Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board) Integrated Pest Management and LEAF (Linking Environment and Farming).
Biodiversity
This option has been identified as being beneficial for biodiversity. All Countryside Stewardship habitat creation, restoration and management options are of great significance for biodiversity recovery, as are the wide range of arable options in the scheme. Capital items and supplements can support this habitat work depending on the holding’s situation and potential.
The connectivity of habitats is also very important and habitat options should be linked wherever possible. Better connectivity will allow wildlife to move/colonise freely to access water, food, shelter and breeding habitat, and will allow natural communities of both animals and plants to adapt in response to environmental and climate change.
Further information
Order the ‘Growing farm wildlife’ DVD from Natural England which gives a step-by-step approach to sowing nectar flower mixtures.
Read Countryside Stewardship: get funding to protect and improve the land you manage to find out more information about Mid Tier and Higher Tier including how to apply.
Published 2 April 2015
Last updated 4 January 2024 + show all updates
- 18 December 2023
Update to How Much Is Paid
- 23 August 2023
Can be used on Rotational land
- 15 August 2023
Removed the 'Rotational' bullet point under 'Where to use this option' as it is incorrect.
- 8 February 2022
New payment rate from 1 January 2022
- 31 January 2022
Additional guidance and advice section updated - this option can form part of an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) approach to prevent the establishment of pests, weeds and diseases.
- 3 February 2021
Option updated for agreements starting 1 January 2021.
- 18 August 2020
Re-linked Growing farm wildlife video
- 28 April 2020
The Requirements and the Advice and suggestions for how to carry out this option sections were updated yesterday.
- 27 April 2020
This page has been updated.
- 11 February 2020
The Requirements and Keeping records sections of this page have been updated.
- 17 May 2018
From 1 January 2019, this option cannot be used on land already receiving funding for Ecological Focus Areas (EFAs) declared for the Basic Payment Scheme (BPS).
- 6 March 2017
Updated for 2017 applications.
- 29 March 2016
Information updated for applications in 2016.
- 2 April 2015
First published.