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Pollinator Preservation: How to Help Bees, Butterflies, and Other Pollinators in Your Garden
by Frank Davis on May 14 2025
Imagine your garden on a summer morning: bees buzz between blossoms, butterflies flit from flower to flower, and a hummingbird hovers by a trumpet-shaped bloom. This lively scene is more than just a delight for gardeners – it’s a crucial ecological process. Pollinator preservation is all about protecting these beneficial creatures so they can continue pollinating plants and keeping our ecosystems (and food supply) thriving. In this in-depth guide, we’ll explore what pollinators are, why they matter, the threats they face, and how you can help pollinators right in your own backyard. From planting pollinator plants and wildflower mixes to creating bee-friendly habitats and using pesticides responsibly, we’ll cover actionable steps to make your garden a haven for bees, butterflies, and more. We’ll also highlight some pollinator-friendly seed products from Bentley Seeds – like their popular Pollinator Wildflower Mix – and how sharing seeds through gifts and eco-friendly promotions can support pollinator health. Let’s dive in and discover how to help pollinators while growing a beautiful garden!
What Are Pollinators and Why Do They Matter?
Pollinators include a wide variety of animals – not just honeybees. Bees (honeybees and thousands of native bee species), butterflies, moths, hummingbirds, beetles, flies, and even bats are all pollinators. When these creatures visit flowers for nectar or pollen, they inadvertently transfer pollen from one bloom to another, fertilizing the plants. This pollination allows plants to produce fruits and seeds. In fact, pollinators are responsible for the reproduction of about 75% of the world’s flowering plants.
The importance of pollinators extends to our food supply and the broader ecological and food system roles they play. Roughly 35% of the world’s food crops depend on animal pollinators – that’s nearly one out of every three bites of food we eat that exists thanks to pollinators. Everything from apples and almonds to tomatoes and pumpkins relies on bees, butterflies, or birds for pollination. In the United States alone, insect pollination services add over $34 billion in economic value to crops each year, ensuring we have abundant fruits, vegetables, and nuts. Beyond food, pollinators support healthy ecosystems: they enable wild plants to reproduce, which in turn provides habitat and food for other wildlife, maintains biodiversity, prevents soil erosion, and even helps with carbon sequestration. In short, pollinator preservation is critical not only for gardens but for agriculture, ecosystems, and environmental health globally.
The Threats Facing Pollinators
Despite their importance, many pollinator species are in decline. Habitat loss, climate change, pesticides, and diseases are creating a perfect storm of challenges for bees, butterflies, and other pollinating animals. As of recently, more than 70 pollinator species (including certain bees and butterflies) are officially listed as endangered or threatened, and many others are experiencing steep drops in population. Here are some of the major threats to pollinators:
Habitat Loss: Urban development and intensive agriculture have reduced the natural habitats of pollinators. Wildflower meadows and prairies have been replaced by roadways, lawns, and monoculture crops. With fewer flowering plants and safe nesting sites, pollinators struggle to find the food and shelter they need. For migratory pollinators like monarch butterflies, the loss of habitat along migration routes makes their long journeys even more perilous. A striking example is the monarch’s reliance on milkweed – vast areas of native milkweed have been wiped out by herbicides and land use changes, contributing to a 90% decline in monarch populations in some regions. Less habitat means fewer pollinators surviving and reproducing.
Pesticides: Widespread use of pesticides (especially certain insecticides like neonicotinoids) can be highly toxic to pollinators. Chemicals meant to kill pests can also poison bees and butterflies or disrupt their navigation and breeding. Improper pesticide use can harm pollinators and other beneficial insects. For instance, spraying a flowering plant with a broad-spectrum insecticide can kill visiting bees. Even herbicides that eliminate wildflowers (weeds) remove food sources for pollinators. Pesticide exposure, when combined with other stressors, weakens pollinator immune systems and can be deadly.
Climate Change: Changing climate patterns are also taking a toll. Warmer temperatures are causing flowers to bloom earlier or distributions of plants to shift, which can throw off the timing for pollinators that depend on those blooms. Heatwaves, droughts, and extreme weather can directly impact pollinator survival and breeding. Recent studies indicate that North American bumblebee populations have declined nearly 50% since the 1970s, with the biggest losses in regions with the greatest temperature increases. Climate change can also exacerbate other threats, like increasing the spread of parasites or invasive plant species that outcompete native pollinator plants.
Diseases and Parasites: Both managed honeybee colonies and wild pollinators face diseases and parasites. Honeybees, for example, have been battling issues like varroa mites, viruses, and fungal diseases that contribute to colony losses. Native bees and butterflies can also be affected by fungal or viral pathogens. Sometimes diseases spread when non-native species (including commercially managed bumblebees or butterflies) mix with wild populations. A weakened pollinator (due to poor nutrition or pesticide exposure) is even more susceptible to illness.
Invasive Species: Invasive plants can overrun landscapes and reduce the diversity of flowering plants that pollinators need. If a non-native plant crowds out all the native wildflowers, pollinators might not recognize or be able to use the invasive plant for food. Invasive insects and animals can also prey on or outcompete native pollinators. For instance, invasive Africanized bees compete with native bees, and invasive wasps or hornets (like the notorious “murder hornet”) can prey on honeybees. These disruptions further threaten pollinator survival.
All these challenges underscore why pollinator preservation matters so much. The decline of pollinators isn’t just a loss of beautiful butterflies or charming bees – it poses a risk to our food security and the health of ecosystems worldwide. The good news is that there’s a lot that home gardeners and communities can do to fight back and help pollinators thrive.
5 Ways to Help Pollinators in Your Home Garden
One of the most effective strategies for pollinator preservation starts at home. Your garden – whether a few containers on a balcony or a big backyard plot – can become a sanctuary for bees, butterflies, and other pollinators. By making thoughtful choices in how you garden, you can provide much-needed food, habitat, and safety for these creatures. Here are five actionable steps and pollinator-friendly gardening tips to help these essential animals:
1. Plant a Diversity of Pollinator-Friendly Flowers: Grow a pollinator buffet. The single best way to help pollinators is to plant pollinator plants – flowers rich in nectar and pollen. Aim for a diverse mix of plants that will bloom from spring through fall, ensuring a continuous food supply. Include a variety of flower colors and shapes to attract different pollinators (bees often love purple, blue, and yellow blooms, while hummingbirds seek red, tubular flowers). Native wildflowers are especially valuable, as local pollinators evolved with them and find them extra nutritious and attractive. For example, planting wild bergamot (bee balm) or purple coneflower in the U.S. provides familiar high-value food for native bees and butterflies. Clumping plants of the same species together can create a target-rich feeding area for pollinators. If you’re not sure where to start, consider sowing a wildflower seed mix. Bentley Seeds’ Pollinator Wildflower Mix is a ready-to-sow blend of annual and perennial flowers specifically chosen to nourish bees, butterflies, hummingbirds and more. This mix (included in many Bentley Seeds packets) features favorites like cosmos, coreopsis, asters, black-eyed Susans, purple coneflower, and others that provide nectar and pollen through multiple seasons. By planting a diverse pollinator garden, you’ll not only help pollinators find food – you’ll also be rewarded with a beautiful, colorful garden alive with movement and life.
2. Provide Shelter and Nesting Sites: Make your garden a pollinator habitat, not just a food stop. Pollinators need more than just flowers; they also require safe places to live, breed, and overwinter. Different pollinators have different habitat needs. Many native bees are solitary and nest in the ground – leaving a few areas of exposed, undisturbed soil or a sandy slope can create nesting spots for mining bees and bumblebees. Other bees (like mason bees and leafcutter bees) will take up residence in small hollows; you can install bee hotels or simply drill holes in a block of wood and mount it in a dry spot to invite these gentle pollinators. Butterflies need sheltered areas to lay eggs and form chrysalises; you can plant specific host plants for caterpillars (e.g., milkweed for monarch caterpillars, parsley or dill for swallowtail caterpillars) and leave some “wild” areas in your yard with leaf litter or stems where butterflies can pupate. Even a small brush pile or a few logs in a corner can provide refuge for pollinating beetles or bumblebee queens. Don’t be too quick to clean up every bit of garden debris – leaving dried stalks and leaves through winter can protect overwintering pollinators. In short, think of your garden not just as pretty flower beds but as a functioning habitat. A mix of flowering plants, native grasses, and a bit of natural messiness can create a welcoming environment where pollinators can feed and raise their young.
3. Offer Water and Extra Resources: Quench the thirst of your backyard pollinators. Just like us, pollinators need water. It’s easy to add a shallow water source in your garden for bees, butterflies, and birds. For example, set out a shallow dish or birdbath and fill it with fresh water, adding a few stones or floating wine corks for insects to land on (so they don’t drown). Butterflies also enjoy mineral-rich mud puddles – you can create a small mud area or set out a dish with wet sand and a pinch of salt; butterflies will sip the water to get nutrients. Hummingbirds appreciate shallow moving water or mist to bathe in, so a little fountain or mister can attract them. Additionally, consider leaving out some overripe fruit on a plate for butterflies (they love fermenting fruit juices) or hanging a hummingbird feeder with sugar water (be sure to clean it regularly). By catering to their hydration and nutrient needs, you turn your garden into a full-service pollinator spa! A reliable water source, especially during hot, dry periods, can greatly increase the number of pollinators that visit and linger in your yard.
4. Garden Without Harmful Pesticides: Make your garden a safe zone for pollinators. One of the actionable steps for home gardeners to preserve pollinators is rethinking pest control. Pesticides – particularly insecticides – can inadvertently kill or harm bees, butterflies, and other beneficial insects. The easiest solution is to avoid using pesticides in your yard whenever possible. Embrace organic gardening techniques and Integrated Pest Management (IPM): focus on building healthy soil and plants, hand-pick pests, use physical barriers or traps, and encourage natural predators (ladybugs, lacewings, birds) to control pests. If you must use a pesticide, choose targeted, pollinator-safe options and use them responsibly. Never spray open blossoms or areas where pollinators are active. It’s best to apply sprays in the evening, when bees and butterflies have returned to their nests, and avoid times when plants are in full bloom. Always follow label instructions carefully – look for warnings about bees. (Many chemical labels now explicitly say to avoid application when bees are “visiting” the plant.) Also, opt for products that break down quickly and are less toxic. For example, insecticidal soaps or neem oil can handle aphids or mites with less risk to bees (but still use them with care and only on targeted plants, not across your whole garden). By minimizing or eliminating chemical use, you’ll make your garden a safe haven for pollinators rather than a danger zone. Remember, a few chewed leaves are a small price to pay for a garden alive with butterflies and bees. A healthy, balanced garden ecosystem will have some pests but also plenty of predators and pollinators – that balance is what you want to achieve.
5. Share Seeds and Spread Awareness: Inspire others to join the pollinator movement. Pollinator preservation is most effective when the idea spreads. One simple but powerful way to support pollinators beyond your own yard is through seed gifting and eco-friendly promotions. Giving friends or neighbors a packet of pollinator-friendly seeds can encourage them to plant flowers for bees and butterflies, expanding pollinator habitat throughout the community. Consider swapping seeds with fellow gardeners or gifting wildflower seed packets as party favors, holiday gifts, or thank-you tokens. (For example, instead of handing out candy or trinkets at events, how about giving guests a pretty packet of wildflower seeds?) Many organizations give away seed packets during Earth Day, Pollinator Week, or community events to promote planting for pollinators. Bentley Seeds makes this easy with their themed pollinator seed packets that are perfect for sharing. Their “Bee The Change” Pollinator Flower Mix packets, for instance, are designed for outreach – a bright orange packet filled with a mix of bee-friendly flower seeds that covers about 10 square feet of ground. It’s a great conversation starter and call-to-action (“Bee the Change”) that you can hand out to friends, students, or at farmer’s markets. Eco-friendly promotions like these not only raise awareness but also get more flowers planted. Likewise, Bentley Seeds’ Pollination Celebration mix comes in an attractive packet ideal for weddings or corporate events, combining a party favor with a positive environmental impact. By sharing seeds and knowledge about pollinators, you empower more people to make a difference. Even posting photos of your pollinator garden on social media or putting up a “Pollinator Habitat” sign can spark conversations. The more people join in planting for pollinators, the more connected habitat our bees and butterflies will have across urban and suburban landscapes. In short: spread the word, and spread the seeds!
Best Flowers for Bees and Butterflies (Top Pollinator Plants)
One of the most common questions from gardeners is, “What are the best flowers for bees and butterflies?” Creating a pollinator-friendly garden means choosing plants that provide high-quality nectar and pollen. While any bloom can offer something, some flowers are superstar pollinator plants known to attract and support lots of bees, butterflies, and other pollinators. Here’s a list of top pollinator-friendly flowers (annuals and perennials) that do well in many U.S. gardens. Try adding a bunch of these to your garden to create a vibrant, pollinator-attracting display:
Wildflower Mixes: Can’t choose? Mixes offer variety! A curated wildflower mix (like Bentley Seeds’ Pollinator Wildflower Mix) contains dozens of species that collectively bloom from early summer to fall. Wildflower mixes often include a balance of annuals (for first-year color) and perennials (for long-term habitat). They’re an easy way to get a pollinator garden started with one seed packet. Simply scatter the seeds in a sunny spot, water, and watch a rainbow of bee-loved blooms appear – from daisies and cosmos to coneflowers and coreopsis. These mixes provide nectar for bees and butterflies, plus seeds for birds later on, making your garden a mini-ecosystem.
Milkweed (Asclepias): A must-have if you want to support monarch butterflies. Milkweeds (such as butterfly weed, common milkweed, and swamp milkweed) produce nectar-rich flowers that many pollinators enjoy, but more importantly, they are the sole host plant for monarch butterfly caterpillars. Monarchs lay their eggs on milkweed, and the emerging caterpillars feed on its leaves. By planting native milkweed species, you’ll attract monarchs and help bolster their populations. Butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa), with its bright orange blooms, is an especially garden-friendly milkweed that attracts bees and hummingbirds too.
Bee Balm (Monarda): Aptly named, bee balm is a magnet for pollinators. This native perennial (also called wild bergamot or monarda) has pom-pom like flower clusters in red, pink, or purple that are a favorite of bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds. Bee balm blooms in mid-summer, providing a rich nectar source during the peak of butterfly season. As a bonus, its leaves are fragrant (mint family) and can be used to make tea. Plant bee balm in a sunny spot with good air circulation (to avoid mildew) and enjoy the pollinator party it invites.
Coneflowers (Echinacea): The classic Purple Coneflower and its relatives are superstar pollinator perennials. Their large, daisy-like purple (or pink, orange, white) flowers have a central cone loaded with nectar and pollen. Bees of all types will buzz around coneflowers, and you’ll often see butterflies like painted ladies and swallowtails feeding on them. Coneflowers bloom from summer into early fall. They are drought-tolerant and easy to grow. Leave the spent flower heads on the plants in fall – not only might they reseed, but the seed cones will attract goldfinches and other birds. Bentley Seeds includes purple coneflower in their pollinator mixes because it’s such a reliable food source for pollinators.
Black-Eyed Susans (Rudbeckia): These cheerful yellow daisies with dark centers are more than just a pretty face – they’re excellent pollinator plants. Black-eyed Susans (and related Gloriosa daisies) bloom over a long period in summer, drawing in bees, butterflies, and even beneficial wasps and beetles that pollinate. They are hardy and sun-loving, perfect for wildflower borders or meadow-style plantings. Pollinators like butterflies often land on their broad petals to sip nectar from the central disk flowers. Like coneflowers, their seed heads also feed birds if left on the plant. They’re an easy, low-maintenance addition to any pollinator garden.
Lavender and Other Herbs: Don’t overlook herbs – many have flowers that pollinators adore. Lavender is famous for its fragrant purple flower spikes that draw honeybees and bumblebees in droves. Plant English or Spanish lavender in a sunny, well-drained spot and enjoy both its scent and the bees it brings. Other great herbs for pollinators include oregano, thyme, basil, mint, and sage. If you let these herbs bolt (flower), you’ll find they become busy feeding stations for small native bees and even butterflies. For example, a simple oregano plant can be covered with bee activity when in full bloom. These plants serve dual purposes – you get culinary uses from the leaves and pollinators get nourishment from the blooms.
Sunflowers and Cosmos: Annual flowers like sunflowers and cosmos are easy to grow from seed and provide abundant pollen and nectar. Sunflowers (Helianthus) not only feed bees with pollen (some varieties also produce nectar) but later in the season their large seed heads become bird feeders. Even a few sunflowers at the back of a garden or along a fence will support bees (you might spot native bumblebees literally rolling in the pollen on a sunflower face!) and then provide seeds for cardinals and finches. Cosmos, with their dainty daisy-like blooms in pink, white, and orange, are butterfly favorites – monarchs and swallowtails often flock to cosmos patches. They bloom all summer and fall until frost, keeping the buffet open for pollinators. Both sunflowers and cosmos are part of Bentley Seeds’ pollinator mixes, or you can sow them separately for concentrated patches of color and activity.
Asters and Goldenrod: As summer winds down, the pollinator buffet shouldn’t end. For late-season blooms, asters (perennial varieties) and goldenrods are crucial. These fall-blooming flowers are rich in nectar and pollen, offering fuel for migrating monarchs and sustenance for bees preparing for winter. Asters produce clusters of purple, blue, or white starry flowers that attract butterflies in droves during autumn. Goldenrod’s bright golden plumes (often unfairly blamed for allergies – the real culprit is ragweed) are a bee magnet in late summer and fall. By including a few asters or goldenrod in your garden, you ensure there’s food for pollinators in the shoulder seasons, not just high summer.
Of course, this list is just a starting point – there are many more pollinator plants out there (from clover in your lawn to blooming trees like fruit trees or redbud). The key is diversity and having something in bloom for as much of the year as possible. Mix and match perennials with annuals and wildflower mixes for the best results. And remember, even a small container garden with a handful of these plants can make a difference. Every flower planted is one more food source for a hungry bee or butterfly!
Seed Gifting: Small Packets, Big Impact
A unique and heartwarming aspect of pollinator preservation is how it can bring people together. Seed gifting is an emerging trend in eco-friendly living – sharing small packets of seeds (often wildflowers) to encourage gardening and habitat creation. When you give someone a packet of pollinator-friendly seeds, you’re not just giving them flowers; you’re giving them the opportunity to make a positive impact on pollinator health. This could be as simple as including seed packets in holiday cards, wedding favors, or corporate giveaways. Businesses and nonprofits are also getting involved by distributing branded seed packets as a green promotional item, spreading both their message and literal wildflowers at the same time. Bentley Seeds specializes in these kinds of seed packets, providing custom designs for occasions like Earth Day, company events, or weddings, all filled with their Pollinator Wildflower Mix or other special blends. It’s a win-win: recipients enjoy planting the seeds and watching flowers grow, and pollinators benefit from the new blooms. If you’ve ever received a seed packet labeled “Save the Bees” or “Butterfly Garden Mix,” you know how a small gift can raise awareness and prompt action. Consider ways you might share seeds in your community – perhaps a little free library that also stocks seed packets, or a neighborhood project to scatter wildflower seeds in neglected areas (with permission, of course). By gifting seeds and promoting pollinator-friendly gardening, each of us can multiply our impact, turning many small gardens into one big movement for pollinator preservation.
Conclusion: Growing a Brighter Future for Pollinators
Pollinator preservation is ultimately about coexistence and stewardship. By understanding the vital role of bees, butterflies, and other pollinators – and by taking even small steps like planting flowers or reducing pesticide use – we become part of the solution to the pollinator crisis. The beauty of it is that helping pollinators also makes our gardens more beautiful and bountiful. A yard filled with diverse blooms will not only support pollinators and contribute to ecological health, but it will also reward you with a vibrant outdoor space teeming with life and color. As you plan your next planting season, think about how you can weave in more pollinator plants and habitat features. Maybe this is the year you start that wildflower patch with a Bentley Seeds Pollinator Mix, or hang up a bee house, or talk to your neighbors about skipping the lawn chemicals. Each action, no matter how small, adds nectar to the pot, so to speak.
By implementing the tips in this guide – planting a variety of pollinator-friendly flowers, providing shelter and water, gardening without harmful pesticides, and sharing seeds and knowledge – you are actively preserving pollinators for future generations. It’s gardeners like you, across the country, who can create a patchwork of safe havens that collectively make a massive difference. So get out there and cultivate some pollinator paradise! Whether you’re nurturing a single pot of flowers on a city balcony or managing a rural acre of meadow, know that your efforts matter. Here’s to seeing your garden come alive with the buzz of bees and the flutter of butterfly wings – a sure sign that you’re helping pollinators thrive. Happy gardening, and thank you for being a friend to the pollinators!

Planting Guide for All USDA Hardiness Zones
by Frank Davis on May 14 2025
Gardening in Maine is very different from gardening in Florida. The United States spans USDA Hardiness Zones 1 through 13, which are defined by average minimum winter temperatures. Your zone affects when you should start seeds, when you can transplant outdoors, and which vegetables will yield best. Bentley Seeds wants every customer to succeed, so they encourage gardeners to “use the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map to discover the ideal planting schedule for your region.” In this section, we’ll give tailored planting advice for all USDA zones – from the coldest to the warmest. We’ll cover timing of planting, tips for each climate, and which crops thrive in which zones.
First, let’s orient ourselves with the USDA zone map. The map below shows the different zones across the U.S. Knowing your exact zone (or at least your range) will help you use the planting calendar and tips that follow
Figure: USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map of the United States. Zones are based on minimum winter temperatures – Zone 1a (coldest) in Alaska at −60°F, up to Zone 13 in tropical climates at 60–70°F minimum. Most of the continental U.S. falls between Zone 3 (northern plains) and Zone 10 (southern tip of Florida) on this map.
Understanding Your Zone: If you don’t know your zone offhand, you can find it by entering your zip code into the USDA zone finder or by referencing the color-coded map above. Once you have your zone, note your approximate last spring frost date and first fall frost date (these define your growing season length). For example, Zone 5 (a medium zone covering parts of the Midwest and Northeast) typically has a last frost around May 15 and first frost around October 15, giving about a 5-month growing season. In contrast, Zone 3 (far north) might freeze until late May and frost again by early September (only ~3-4 month season), whereas Zone 9 or 10 (deep south) may have a frost-free period from February through December or longer. Armed with this info, you can decide when to start seeds indoors and when it’s safe to plant outside.
Below, we provide zone-by-zone planting advice. For simplicity, we’ll group some zones together where the guidance is similar. Remember, these are general tips – local microclimates or unusual weather patterns might shift dates by a week or two, so always keep an eye on your local forecast. Bentley Seeds also offers downloadable planting calendars by zone (more on that in the Tools section) to give specific month-by-month recommendations.
Zones 1-3: Very Short Growing Season (Arctic & Upper Northern Regions)
Zones 1-3 are the coldest and have the shortest growing seasons in the U.S. This includes parts of Alaska, northern Minnesota/North Dakota, and high elevations in the Rockies. Winters are severe (down to −40°F or below in Zone 3) and summers are cool. Zone 3, for instance, has winter lows to -30°F and typically a final frost around May 15 and first frost by September 15. That’s only about 120 frost-free days.
Planting Challenges: The ground may take longer to warm up in spring, and some heat-loving plants may never fully mature due to lack of warm days. Crops that thrive in warmer Zones 5-8 (like melons, long-season corn, or hot peppers) often struggle in Zone 3 because the soil doesn’t stay warm enough. Gardeners in these zones must use every trick to extend the season: starting seeds indoors, using row covers, cold frames, or hoop houses, and choosing ultra-early or cold-tolerant varieties.
What to Grow: Despite the challenges, yes, you can have a productive vegetable garden in Zones 1-3. Focus on cool-season and quick-maturing vegetables. Many leafy greens and root crops actually prefer the cooler weather. Great choices include: lettuce, spinach, chard, kale, collards, radishes, turnips, beets, carrots, peas, and broccoli. These can all tolerate light frosts and grow in cooler temps. In fact, an expert gardener notes that “radicchio, collards, kale, and escarole are all good choices for vegetables that grow well in cold climates.” Fast-growing Asian greens (bok choy, mizuna, etc.) and cabbages are also excellent – they thrive in cool springs and don’t mind the mild summers. You can keep sowing many greens every few weeks from late May through summer for continuous harvests until fall frost.
For Zone 3, root vegetables like potatoes can do well (plant as soon as ground thaws, harvest before hard frost). Bush beans can produce if you plant early June; they need some warmth but many varieties will yield in ~60 days which is feasible. Summer squash (zucchini) is possible: one tip is to start seeds indoors around May 1 and transplant after frost; even in Zone 3, zucchini can be sown successfully if given frost protection for late spring. Stick to faster summer squash, as winter squash and pumpkins often require longer season and more heat which might be risky in Zone 3 (unless you have a very protected spot or use season extension).
Strategies:
Start Seeds Indoors Early: With Bentley Seeds’ high germination rates, you’ll want to give them a head-start indoors. Begin cool-season crops 4-6 weeks before last frost (e.g., start cabbage, broccoli in April for a May transplant in Zone 3). Start warm-season plants like tomatoes extra early indoors (8+ weeks) and choose determinant or early varieties that set fruit quickly (some tomatoes mature in 55-60 days). You may need grow lights and heat mats to simulate a warm greenhouse – an investment many northern gardeners find worthwhile.
Use Season Extenders: Cold frames, row covers (frost cloth), or even products like “Walls-of-Water” can help. These protect seedlings from late frosts and add a few degrees of warmth. Gardeners in Zone 3 often cover tender plants at night into early June just to be safe. Also consider black plastic or dark mulch around heat-loving plants to warm the soil.
Container Growing: If your native soil is cold or your season is super short, try growing some vegetables in containers or raised beds. Containers heat up faster in spring. You can even move pots of tomatoes or peppers to a sunny sheltered spot for more warmth. One report suggests that growing typically warm-requiring plants (melons, peppers) in containers in Zone 3 “may provide possibilities” that in-ground might not.
Choose Varieties Wisely: Bentley Seeds offers many heirloom varieties; check the days-to-maturity on the packet. For Zone 3, prioritize varieties labeled 60 days or less for fruits, 90 days or less for root crops, etc. Also, cold-hardy varieties (certain cabbages, kale, etc.) will withstand light frosts – meaning you can plant them earlier and harvest later. For example, butterhead and loose-leaf lettuces are recommended for Zone 3 because they mature quickly and tolerate cool weather. Likewise, “garden cress produces usable leaves in just 12 days” in cool weather – instant gratification!
With these strategies, even Zone 3 gardeners can enjoy bountiful harvests of salads, greens, and more. Just plan carefully and don’t be afraid to use technology (indoor starts, covers) to help Mother Nature along.
Zones 4-6: Cool to Medium Growing Season (Northern & Central U.S.)
Zones 4, 5, and 6 cover a large portion of the United States – including much of the Northeast, Upper Midwest, Great Plains, and interior West. Winters are cold but not extreme (zone 5 avg minimum is −10 to −20°F), and summers are warm but not scalding. The growing season here ranges roughly from late April/early May to October (about 4.5 to 6 months frost-free). Zone 5 has a “medium length growing season” – most veggies will mature before first frost, and indeed “most vegetable varieties will have no problem maturing” in a Zone 5 summer.
Planting Timing: In these zones, the last spring frost is usually sometime in April (Zone 6) to mid-May (Zone 4). First fall frost might be late September (Zone 4) to mid-October (Zone 6). This gives a decent window to grow both cool-season and warm-season crops, often with two planting waves (one in spring, one in mid-summer for fall crops).
Cool-Season Vegetables: You can sow hardy veggies as soon as soil is workable in spring (often late March or April in Zone 6; mid to late April in Zone 4). This includes peas, spinach, radishes, carrots, beets, kale, and broccoli. These crops relish the cool spring and will mature by early summer. Many gardeners in these zones do successive sowings of lettuce and spinach through spring. By late summer (August), you can plant a second round of fast cool-season crops to harvest in the cooler fall weather (e.g., a September planting of spinach or radishes for an October yield).
Warm-Season Vegetables: Wait until after the last frost to plant tender vegetables outdoors. For Zone 5, around mid-May is safe; Zone 6 might be early May. This group includes tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, cucumbers, squash, beans, and corn. Starting these indoors is common: for example, tomatoes and peppers should be started indoors about 6-8 weeks before last frost, then transplanted outside in late spring. Bentley Seeds provides robust tomato and pepper seeds (with many heirlooms available), which Zone 4-6 gardeners often start in March in seed trays. By May, those seedlings are ready to go into the garden. Ensure the danger of frost is past – even cover newly transplanted tomatoes with a bucket or row cover if an unexpected late frost threatens.
What Grows Best: In Zones 4-6, you have the advantage of being able to grow nearly the full range of traditional vegetable garden plants. Tomatoes, peppers, and beans usually do very well (plenty of summer warmth for them). Sweet corn is feasible especially in Zone 5-6; just choose varieties that mature by late summer (many sweet corns are ~75 days). Root crops like potatoes, turnips, carrots thrive – they appreciate the moderate summers (not too hot). Brassicas (cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower) often perform excellently in these zones if transplanted in spring and given some pest protection; they enjoy the mild conditions of late spring and can often be grown again in fall. One thing to note: hot-season crops like okra, peanuts, some melons that require sustained heat might produce, but perhaps not as prolifically as in the Deep South. They can be grown in Zone 6 (especially if a hot summer), but in Zone 4 the season might be a bit short or cool for something like okra or large watermelons. Choose faster-maturing melon varieties (like an ‘Icebox’ watermelon that ripens in ~80 days) if attempting them in Zone 4-5.
Garden Tips:
Stagger Plantings: Exploit the spring and fall cooler periods. Plant your peas, lettuce, brassicas early. After harvesting those by June, you’ll have space to put in heat-lovers (e.g., follow your pea trellis with a planting of pole beans in early June for a late summer bean crop). Then, as summer crops finish in September, use vacant space to sow a quick fall batch of spinach or cilantro. This way, you maximize the use of your plot through the season.
Watch for Frost: Even in late spring, have covers handy. A clear plastic tarp or row cover can save your seedlings during an unexpected cold snap. In fall, a light frost won’t kill hardy veggies (kale, carrots actually get sweeter after a frost), but do harvest sensitive plants (basil, tomatoes) or protect them if an early frost hits.
Use Bentley’s Zone Planting Calendar: Bentley provides zone-specific planting guides – for example, a Zone 5 calendar that lists what to start when. According to that guide, by May 15 everything from beans to cucumbers can be sown outside in Zone 5. Following such a schedule will help ensure “no problem maturing” your crops in time. The calendar also reminds you of indoor start times and succession planting dates.
Soil Preparation: Zones 4-6 often have rich soils (like the famed Midwest loam). Use that to your advantage by keeping soil healthy: add compost at the start of the season. Good soil plus proper spacing will yield big results. (Remember not to overcrowd – even though you have decent space, follow spacing guidelines. For instance, give each tomato about 2-3 feet of space as Bentley recommends, and carrots about 2 inches apart in rows.)
Overall, Zones 4-6 are a gardener’s delight because you can grow almost the entire catalog of Bentley Seeds here. You get distinct seasons: a cool period for peas and greens, a warm period for tomatoes and corn, then a cool finish for pumpkins and cabbages. By choosing appropriate planting dates and varieties, you’ll have a continuous harvest from spring through fall.
Zones 7-8: Long Warm Seasons (Mid-South, Lower Midwest, Coastal)
Zones 7 and 8 encompass areas with mild winters and hot summers – think of the Mid-Atlantic states, parts of the South (like Georgia, northern Florida for Zone 8, and Carolinas), the coastal Pacific Northwest (Zone 8 but cooler summer), and interior California. The average minimal temps range from 0°F (Zone 7) to 10-20°F (Zone 8). The frost-free season is long – roughly from March through early November in many Zone 7/8 locales (about 7-8+ months of growing potential).
Planting Timing: In these zones, you can start planting cool-season crops quite early (late February or March for Zone 8, perhaps mid-March for Zone 7). The last frost might be as early as mid-March (Zone 8) to early April (Zone 7). Conversely, first fall frost might hold off until late October or November. This means two full “shoulder” seasons for cool-weather crops and a very long warm growing period for summer crops.
Early Spring: Plant cool-season vegetables as soon as winter breaks. Peas, spinach, kale, onions, and broccoli can often be planted by March. In Zone 8, many gardeners plant potatoes and peas around St. Patrick’s Day, for instance. You can also start onion sets, carrots, beets, and lettuce in early spring.
Summer (Warm Season): By April, it’s usually warm enough in Zone 7/8 to set out warm-season transplants or sow seeds like beans, corn, squash. A rule of thumb: once daytime highs are regularly above 60°F and nights stay above 45-50°F, most summer veggies will establish well. Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant can often go out in April in Zone 8 (or late April for Zone 7). These zones’ summers are hot enough to grow okra, sweet potatoes, watermelon, cantaloupe, field peas (black-eyed peas) – all those heat-loving crops will thrive. In fact, peppers and okra adore the heat of Zones 8+, producing abundantly. An example: “Peppers are perfect heat-tolerant crops for sweltering gardens and need warm temperatures to thrive in hardiness zones 9-11” – so Zone 8 is on the cusp but still very suitable for peppers (and definitely for zone 9). If anything, Zone 7/8 summers can be so hot that some cooler veggies (like peas or lettuce) will struggle by late June – so those are grown in spring or not until fall again.
Fall Season: A major advantage in these zones is the ability to have a robust fall garden. Come late August or September, you can sow another round of all the cool-weather veggies for harvest in fall and even into winter. For example, in Zone 8 you might plant broccoli, cabbage, and kale transplants in September to harvest through December. Many root crops can be planted in fall as well (carrots, radishes, turnips) for late fall yields. The mild autumn of Zone 7/8 means you can enjoy fresh greens for Thanksgiving easily.
What Grows Best: It might be easier to list what doesn’t grow in 7-8! You can grow nearly every vegetable variety Bentley offers. Tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, squash, beans, corn – all warm-season staples – do great. You’ll also have success with sweet potatoes and okra in Zone 8, which require a longer hot season (these might be marginal in Zone 6 but in 7/8 they flourish). Melons (watermelons, cantaloupes) ripen sweetly in the summer sun here. Meanwhile, cool-season crops like brassicas (cabbage, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts) can be grown either in spring or fall. Many Zone 7/8 gardeners actually prefer to grow their broccoli/brussels in fall because the cooler end-of-year weather is ideal and pests are less intense than in spring. Leafy greens (lettuce, collards, mustard greens) can almost be grown year-round except during the hottest midsummer months.
One difference: in Zone 8 parts of the Deep South, the intense summer heat can cause lettuce or spinach to bolt (go to seed) quickly, so those are best confined to cooler parts of the year. Similarly, if you try to grow something like shell peas or head lettuce in July in Zone 8, you’ll likely fail – but plant them in February/March or October and you’ll succeed. So timing is key.
Garden Tips:
Succession and Rotation: Because the growing window is long, practice succession planting to make the most of it. For example, plant a crop of bush beans in April, another in July, and perhaps another in early September (if a quick variety) to have multiple harvest waves. After harvesting garlic or onions in early summer, you can use that space for a quick summer planting of okra or a later planting of fall greens.
Protect from Peak Heat: The summers in these zones (especially Zone 8 in places like the Southeast) can be very hot and humid. Some delicate veggies might need partial shade or extra water in July/August. For instance, tomatoes may experience blossom drop in extreme heat above 95°F. Providing some afternoon shade (planting on east side of taller crops or using shade cloth) can help cool-season veggies last longer into summer. Also mulch well to conserve soil moisture and keep roots cooler.
Year-Round Gardening: In many Zone 8 areas (and even 7b), it’s possible to garden nearly year-round with minimal protection. You might overwinter hardy greens under row covers. The ground rarely freezes deeply, so root crops can be left in soil and dug as needed (carrots, parsnips). Embrace the ability to grow a “winter garden” of sorts – plant kale and collards in fall and they can survive through mild winters for early spring harvest.
Pests and Diseases: The flip side of longer seasons is that pests (insects, diseases) have more time to proliferate. Keep an eye out for common southern pests: aphids, squash vine borers, tomato hornworms, etc. Use integrated pest management (row covers, hand picking, organic treatments if needed). Bentley’s seeds are untreated, which is great, but it also means you should be proactive in protecting seedlings (e.g., use collars around squash stems to guard against borers, or plant marigolds and nasturtiums as companions to deter pests).
Success with Herbs: These zones are fantastic for herbs too. Basil, oregano, thyme, dill – all can be direct sown or transplanted and will thrive with the long growing season. Many herbs (perennials like rosemary, sage) will even overwinter in Zone 7/8, becoming year-round plants in your garden.
In summary, Zones 7-8 offer a lush growing environment. Most Bentley vegetable seeds will do very well here as long as you plan for the hot summers and utilize the extended spring/fall. You really get the best of both worlds: heat for tomatoes and corn, but also enough cool periods for cabbages and carrots.
Zones 9-10: Nearly Year-Round Growing (South, Coastal, and Desert Regions)
Zones 9 and 10 are essentially frost-free or have only a brief/light winter. This includes much of Florida, southern Texas, southern California, parts of Arizona (Zone 9), Gulf Coast areas, and coastal southern Oregon/California (Zone 9/10). Zone 9’s average winter lows are 20-30°F; Zone 10’s are 30-40°F (with only occasional frost). In these climates, the concept of a “last frost” might be in January or February, and a “first frost” not until December – meaning you can grow something literally all year.
However, gardening in Zone 9-10 flips the script: the summers can be extremely hot, so the growing seasons are almost inverted. Gardeners often plant in late winter (for spring harvest) and fall (for winter harvest), while mid-summer can be a challenging period for some plants due to heat stress.
Planting Timing:
Late Winter/Early Spring (Jan–Mar): This is prime planting time for many vegetables in Zone 9/10. Since frost risk is minimal, you can start sowing cool-season crops in January/February and warm-season crops by March. For example, in Zone 9 Florida, February is a great time to plant tomatoes, peppers, squash, etc. One Zone 9 guide notes: “The average last frost in Zone 9 is March 1st, so get ready to plant out all your summer crops soon! Because the growing season is so long, everything can be direct seeded outside… finicky plants like tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant can be transplanted as well.”. This means by March you can have your main summer garden already in the ground.
Summer (Apr–Aug): Summers are long. In places like Florida (Zone 10) or inland California (Zone 9), summer heat can exceed 95–100°F regularly. Many tropical vegetables or heat-lovers will thrive: okra, sweet potatoes, Southern peas (black-eyed peas), yardlong beans, melons, and of course tomatoes and peppers (with irrigation). But traditional “cool-season” veggies absolutely will not survive the peak of summer here. They must be grown in winter instead. Gardeners in these zones might take a break on planting new lettuce or broccoli during the hottest months. Instead, you might plant cover crops or focus on heat-proof plants. For example, okra, watermelon, and eggplant love the heat and can be continuously planted. A guide for Zone 9 suggests by May/June, focus on “heat loving favorites: okra, Southern peas, summer spinach (e.g., Malabar spinach), and sweet potatoes.”. Indeed, those crops laugh at the heat and will carry your garden through the dog days. Water consistently and use mulch to help them along.
Fall (Sept–Dec): As temperatures moderate in fall, you essentially get a second spring. In Zones 9-10, October is an ideal time to start cool-season vegetables again. You can plant carrots, cabbage, lettuce, peas, and more for winter harvest. In Zone 10 (South FL, for instance), October-November is actually the main time to grow things like tomatoes and cucumbers – the winter acts like the northern summer. A source from Gurney’s notes: “Its warm winters make zone 10 suitable for growing cool-weather crops such as lettuce, spinach, onions, radishes and beets.”. So in zone 10, you plant those in fall/winter and harvest in winter/early spring. Essentially, you avoid the extreme summer for these crops. The only “off-limits” time might be late December/January if a rare frost occurs, but even then, frost cloth can protect many plants. Many Zone 10 gardeners are harvesting tomatoes, peppers, and squash in December that were planted in fall, since freezing temps are rare or very brief.
What Grows Best: Zones 9-10 can grow an enormous variety of plants, including everything temperate plus many tropical edibles. Some highlights:
Heat-Loving Veggies: As mentioned, okra, sweet potatoes, chili peppers, eggplant, melons, cucumbers, pumpkins, and Southern peas all excel. They actually may produce more heavily here than anywhere else, provided they get water. For example, peppers not only thrive but can become perennials in these zones; a pepper plant might live multiple years, yielding year-round (in absence of frost). Sweet potatoes planted in spring will vine vigorously and yield by summer’s end – they are one of “the most heat-loving vegetables you can plant”. Malabar spinach or New Zealand spinach (alternatives to true spinach) are great greens for summer since they love heat and humidity.
Cool-Season Veggies in Winter: You can successfully grow the whole array of cool-season crops, but do it from fall through spring. Lettuce, spinach, kale, broccoli, cauliflower, carrots, radish, onions, peas – all of these can be grown in Zones 9-10 during the cooler months. In Zone 9, you might grow them in late winter/early spring as well. In Zone 10 (South Florida, for example), the best time for these might be late fall through winter. Gardeners often treat the winter as “spring”: plant in October, harvest through February. You’ll get wonderful results because the plants won’t freeze but enjoy the mild temperatures. Salad greens can be continually picked in winter. Root crops like beets and onions get large without bolt or disease due to gentler sun.
Perennial/Tropical Crops: Zones 9-10 can also accommodate fruiting vegetables that act perennial in warm climates. Examples: tomatillo and peppers can overwinter, chayote squash (a perennial vine squash) can grow multi-year, cassava (yuca) can be grown as a root crop in Zone 9/10 with about 8-10 months growing season. Even some exotic veggies like winged beans, tropical pumpkins, or Asian yardlong beans do great. Bentley Seeds mostly carries traditional varieties, but these zones allow you to experiment beyond that too.
Garden Tips:
Direct Seeding vs Transplanting: Because the season is so long, you can direct-sow many things that other zones would start indoors. For instance, in Zone 9 you can direct sow squash, cucumbers, corn, beans in situ in March or April and they’ll catch up fast. As one guide said, “everything can be direct seeded” in long-season zones. Transplanting is still useful for crops like tomatoes or peppers to get a jump, but even those could be direct seeded by an experienced gardener (though germination in cool soil is a concern in Feb). Use transplants for a faster start on first plantings, then later successions can be sown directly.
Summer Care: Provide ample water and mulch. The sun intensity in these zones can be brutal on young plants – consider some shade for seedlings or transplant in the evening so they harden off without midday sun. Rainy seasons (like Florida’s summer downpours) may alternate with drought. Use mulch (straw, leaves) to moderate soil moisture and temperature.
Soil Management: Warm climates can lead to quicker depletion of soil organic matter. Compost regularly to enrich soil. If in a desert Zone 9 (e.g., parts of AZ or CA), soil may be alkaline and low in organic matter – amend with compost, consider raised beds with a good soil mix.
Take Advantage of “Off Season”: While northern gardeners hunker down in winter, you in Zone 9/10 can actively garden. Use Bentley’s seeds to start a “winter vegetable garden” – e.g., plant a round of carrots and kale in November, and you could be harvesting fresh produce in January. Also, consider planting cover crops or green manures in any truly off time (if you ever let a bed go fallow for a month or two) to improve soil fertility.
Pest/Disease Pressure: Year-round growing means pests can be year-round too. Watch for insect cycles – for instance, whiteflies and aphids can be pervasive in warm regions. Use organic pest controls and keep garden clean of debris where pests breed. Also, heat and humidity can cause fungal diseases (powdery mildew, blights) – planting resistant varieties and ensuring good spacing for airflow is important. (For example, give tomatoes in humid Zone 9 at least 4-5 feet between rows for airflow, even more than one might in a drier cooler zone.)
In short, Zones 9-10 allow for continuous gardening and a wide variety of plants, but the gardener’s calendar is different: pay attention to when to plant cool vs warm crops. Bentley Seeds’ planting guides can help here too – they advise Zone 9 gardeners on monthly tasks, such as continuing to start okra and melons indoors in March and sowing things like beans, okra, corn, and Southern peas in succession every few weeks through summer. By following such guidance, you’ll enjoy harvests almost all year.
Zone 11+ (Tropical Climate Considerations)
While USDA Zone 11 and above are not common in the continental U.S. (only extreme southern Florida, parts of Hawaii, and Puerto Rico fall in Zone 11-13), a brief note: In these truly tropical climates, you have no frost at all. You can grow tropical vegetables and fruits year-round. Many standard veggies will grow as perennials (tomatoes may become vines, peppers become shrubs). However, extreme heat and humidity in tropical summers might make some temperate veggies hard to grow without elevation or cooler season planting.
The advice for Zone 10 largely applies to Zone 11-13 as well: use the cooler part of the year for traditional veggies, and embrace tropical staples (cassava, taro, tropical spinach, etc.) in the hottest parts. The USDA map technically adds Zone 12 (50-60°F min) and Zone 13 (60-70°F min) for these areas – but the main takeaway is no freezes to reset pests or diseases. Thus, crop rotation and pest control are critical in true tropics.
For most readers in the mainland U.S., Zone 11+ may not be applicable, but Bentley Seeds could certainly be grown in Puerto Rico or Hawaii with the right timing and care.
No matter your zone, Bentley Seeds provides resources to help you succeed. Their website reminds gardeners to “discover your growing zone from the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map” and then plan accordingly. By following the zone-tailored advice above, you can use Bentley’s high-quality seeds to their full potential, ensuring you plant at the right time for your climate. And remember – gardening is an adventure. Don’t be afraid to experiment (even northern gardeners try growing watermelons with some hacks, and southern gardeners try lettuce in the shade). With experience, you’ll refine what works in your specific location.
In the next section, we’ll introduce some downloadable tools and resources that can further assist your planning – including planting calendars, spacing charts, and zone guides.

by Frank Davis on May 13 2025
Bentley Seeds has been helping American families grow their own food and flowers since 1975. What began as a small family-run seed packet operation in Cambridge, New York, has grown into one of the most trusted names in home gardening. Today, as Bentley Seeds prepares to celebrate its 50th anniversary, the company's rich history remains tightly rooted in its original values: quality, integrity, and a commitment to helping people grow good things.
How Bentley Seeds Got Started
Bentley Seeds was originally established as the packet seed division of Lofts Seed Company in 1975. Located in upstate New York, the company focused on providing reliable seed packets for home gardeners during a time when self-sufficiency and food security were gaining renewed interest across the country.
Over the next two decades, as gardening trends evolved and interest in heirloom and non-GMO crops grew, the Bentley family took full ownership of the brand. They transformed it into an independent, family-owned operation with full control over seed sourcing, packaging, and fulfillment.
A Family Business Built to Last
Today, Bentley Seeds is still family owned and operated. Jeff, Lucy, Katie, and Chloe Bentley are all actively involved in various aspects of the business, from product development to customer service. Their hands-on leadership ensures Bentley Seeds continues to operate with the same passion and integrity that guided its early days.
This consistency has made Bentley Seeds a go-to source for gardeners of all skill levels. Whether you're planting a backyard vegetable garden, creating a pollinator haven, or using custom seed packets as wedding favors, Bentley Seeds delivers a high-quality product with a personal touch.
Commitment to Non-GMO Seed Integrity
From the beginning, Bentley Seeds has taken a firm stance against genetically modified organisms (GMOs). They were among the first seed companies to sign the Safe Seed Pledge, an initiative by the Council for Responsible Genetics, committing not to knowingly buy or sell GMO seeds.
This pledge is more than a marketing point. It's a statement of trust. Gardeners know that when they purchase from Bentley, they’re getting clean, uncoated, high-germination seeds that are safe for families, pets, pollinators, and the planet.
Expanding Through Innovation
Innovation has played a huge role in Bentley Seeds’ growth. The company was one of the first in the seed industry to fully invest in in-house packet printing and seed filling operations. This vertical integration allows them to maintain superior quality control and turn around orders quickly.
Today, Bentley Seeds has the capacity to fill over 250,000 seed packets per day, thanks to state-of-the-art machinery and a climate-controlled warehouse. These capabilities support not just retail seed sales, but also large-scale promotional projects, corporate gifts, and custom event favors.
Custom Seed Packets: A Brand Differentiator
While many know Bentley for their seed quality, others are drawn to the brand because of its creative and beautifully designed custom seed packets. These special occasion packets have been used at:
Weddings
Memorial services
Corporate giveaways
Earth Day events
Schools and fundraising efforts
Each packet is thoughtfully designed and printed in-house, allowing customers to create a lasting impression while giving something meaningful and eco-friendly. These efforts have helped Bentley Seeds expand its reach and attract a new generation of gardeners who care about sustainability and storytelling.
Grounded in Gardening Education
Part of Bentley Seeds' mission has always been to empower home gardeners with the knowledge they need to succeed. The company offers:
Planting calendars by USDA hardiness zone
Gardening tips on packet backs
Downloadable charts and spacing guides
Blogs with seasonal advice
They've also made it a point to keep gardening accessible. Many of their packets are priced affordably, making it easy for beginners to try their hand at planting without a steep investment.
Celebrating 50 Years of Growth
As Bentley Seeds approaches its 50th anniversary in 2025, the company is poised for its next stage of growth. Yet it remains committed to its founding principles:
Quality over quantity: Every seed is fresh crop, high germination, and non-GMO.
People first: The Bentley family still answers customer emails, packs orders, and listens to feedback.
Grow good things: Whether it’s food, flowers, or community impact, Bentley believes in making the world better, one seed at a time.
A Legacy Rooted in Trust
Bentley Seeds stands out not just for what it sells, but for how it operates. Gardeners across the U.S. return year after year because they trust Bentley to provide seeds that grow. The company’s longevity is proof of its consistent quality, community involvement, and passion for helping people connect with the soil.
From the first seed packet printed in 1975 to the 250,000th packet filled today, Bentley Seeds has remained a beacon for home growers, educators, and eco-conscious consumers alike. Their story is one of family, innovation, and deep respect for the natural world. And as the company continues to grow, so will the gardens they help create.
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