Last order dates for Christmas 2024
NEXT DISPATCH FOR ORDERS IS MONDAY 6TH JANUARY.
Flahavan's Hi8 Date & Toasted Coconut Muesli 450g
€3.86Flahavan's Hi8 Date & Toasted Coconut Muesli 450g
Chilled 01
Chilled 02
Solaris Tea Organic Lemon Harmony Pyramid Teabags 15x2g
€5.65Solaris Tea Organic Lemon Harmony Pyramid Teabags 15x2g
Waterford Irish Single Malt Whisky Heritage Hunter 700ml
Sold OutWaterford Irish Single Malt Whisky Heritage Hunter 700ml
Lorge Chocolatier Selection of 12 Handmade Assorted Filled Chocolates 140g
€27.49Lorge Chocolatier Selection of 12 Handmade Assorted Filled Chocolates 140g
Hampers & Gifts 2
Kids Kitchen Takeover Cookery Book by Oliver McCabe
€24.95Kids Kitchen Takeover Cookery Book by Oliver McCabe
Alternative Christmas Pudding Brandy & Christmas Spices 600g
€24.95Alternative Christmas Pudding Brandy & Christmas Spices 600g
Don't forget to check out our Christmas delivery dates for last orders and transit times.
€16.95
This bamboo Bee and Bug House makes a great addition to any garden. Providing nesting tubes and a home for endangered solitary bees is one way of helping biodiversity and attracting pollinators to your garden. Made from hollow bamboo stalks, it provides much-needed shelter for all sorts of bees and bugs.
A Bee Hotel is a magnet for solitary bees and spring-nesting mason bees. A place for them to lay their eggs and raise their young. Solitary bees are harmless and not aggressive.
The best time to put up a bee house is in late winter, but other bee species will use the tubes throughout the growing season, so there is no wrong time to put it up.
The more southerly facing that you place the Bee Hotel, the better, as the extra warmth will help bees over the cold winter. Ensure the Bee hotel is positioned between 1 and 1.5m off the ground.
Dimensions in cm L 12.7 x W 15.2 x H 20
Material Pine wood, bamboo, zinc
Biodiversity & Wellbeing - feeling closer to the wider natural world is important for us all.
Connecting to Nature aims to raise happiness levels by introducing the birds and the bees to households nationwide. They produce Irish Native Wildflower Seeds on their own sites in Faithlegg, Co Waterford, and the mixtures are curated to provide both food for wildlife and colour throughout the year.
Their ethos is simple; being connected with nature is about feeling close to the wider natural world, it’s a relationship that helps us feel good. Sowing wildflowers and feeding birds are a wonderful way to feel closer to nature and bring wildlife closer to you.
The business is the brainchild of Julie Power, whose Waterford-based family have been in the seed business for six generations, initially established in 1859 as Power Seeds which operated from Ballinakill, Dunmore Road and later from Glenville where the remnants of the old seed plant can still be seen today.
“You don’t have to be in the countryside to connect with nature, all you have to do is create an environment that consistently attracts birds and bees”.