Decorative Bee Drinker & Garden Cuppy | 11 Designs
SKU: 68239361517

Decorative Bee Drinker & Garden Cuppy | 11 Designs

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Description

Decorative Bee Drinker & Garden Cuppy | 11 DesignsOne of the quietly underappreciated jobs in a wildlife friendly garden is providing water for bees. Bees die of thirst more easily than most gardeners realise they need water for hive cooling, brood care, and their own hydration through hot summers but open water (birdbaths, ponds, deep dishes) is genuinely dangerous to them. They can't swim well, and many die slipping into birdbaths they came to drink from. The proper solution is a shallow dish with

One of the quietly underappreciated jobs in a wildlife-friendly garden is providing water for bees. Bees die of thirst more easily than most gardeners realise — they need water for hive cooling, brood care, and their own hydration through hot summers — but open water (birdbaths, ponds, deep dishes) is genuinely dangerous to them. They can't swim well, and many die slipping into birdbaths they came to drink from. The proper solution is a shallow dish with landing space — somewhere a bee can perch and drink without falling in.

This is exactly that: a decorative cuppy water dish, with a charming creature perched alongside, that gives garden bees a safe and reliable summer drink. Available in eleven different designs, so you can pick whichever creature speaks to your garden — or collect several and place them around the borders.

What it is, what it does

The cuppy is a shallow decorative metal water dish with a small ornamental creature mounted alongside — a charming little garden sculpture that's also a properly functional bee drinker. Each one features:

  • A shallow water reservoir — sized properly for bees, not too deep, with surface tension breaking points that let them drink safely
  • A decorative creature companion — bee, butterfly, bird, dragonfly, frog, lizard or swallow — mounted alongside the dish
  • Durable metalwork — built to live outside year-round in British weather
  • Available in eleven design variations — so you can match different parts of the garden (lizard for the rockery, frog for the pond edge, swallow over the herb bed)
  • Dual-purpose — through the warm months it's a bee drinker; in autumn/winter you can repurpose as a small bird-feeder dish

Why bees need a water dish

Most gardeners think about feeding bees through planting (foxgloves, comfrey, lavender, the wider Plants-for-Pollinators range) but forget about water entirely. Bees actually need both:

  • Hive cooling — honey bees use water to cool the hive in hot weather, fanning evaporating water across the brood
  • Brood care — nurse bees mix water with stored pollen to feed larvae
  • Individual hydration — like every other insect, bees need to drink, particularly in hot dry weather
  • Salt and mineral collection — bees seek water that's slightly mineralised; perfectly clean tap water is actually less attractive than slightly weathered water

In hot summers, you'll see bees gathering at puddles, damp soil, leaky taps, and any standing water in the garden. A proper bee drinker provides this in a place they can actually access safely. Once bees discover your cuppy, they'll return throughout the season — and the garden's pollinator activity meaningfully improves.

The eleven designs

Each variant features a different creature companion, all in coordinating decorative metalwork:

  • Bee 1 and Bee 2 — the natural choice for a bee drinker; two slightly different bee designs
  • Bird — a perched garden bird; particularly nice on a small tea-table
  • Butterfly 1, Butterfly 2, Butterfly 3 — three butterfly designs in different poses; brilliant alongside butterfly-attracting borders (buddleia, verbena bonariensis, sedum)
  • Dragonfly — works beautifully near a pond or water feature where dragonflies hunt
  • Dragonfly 2 — a second dragonfly variation
  • Frog — particularly charming on a low wall, by a pond edge, or in a shaded mossy spot
  • Lizard — ideal for sunny rockery positions where real lizards bask
  • Swallow — the iconic summer-migrant bird; place where you'll watch swallows skim low over the garden on summer evenings

The decorative finishes are properly considered — the kind of garden ornament that looks like an intentional piece of design rather than an afterthought. They suit cottage gardens, formal beds, herb gardens and wildlife-friendly plantings equally well.

Where to place it

  • Within sight of a window — bee-watching from the kitchen sink is one of the small daily pleasures of a working garden
  • Near pollinator-friendly plants — lavender, comfrey, borage, buddleia, sedum, and the wider Plants for Pollinators range. Bees will already be working these plants; the water dish completes the picture
  • Sheltered from prevailing wind — bees prefer water sources in still air; a corner protected from the wind is ideal
  • At a low to medium height — on a wall, table, plant stand, or upturned pot; not too high to access for refilling, not on the ground where it'll get fouled
  • Near (but not directly beside) the LV Bespoke Cluster of 5 Cups — if you stock them, the cups can act as additional bee water dishes; together they form a proper pollinator hydration station
  • Away from the bird feeding station — bees don't mind sharing a garden with birds but feeding stations attract enough seed spillage and droppings that mixing water and feed in one spot is unwise

How to use it properly

  • Add pebbles or marbles to the dish — this is the single most important detail. The pebbles give bees safe landing platforms; water fills the gaps; bees can drink without falling in. Without pebbles, the dish is still useable but less safe
  • Refresh the water every day or two in summer — stale water is less attractive and can develop mosquito larvae
  • Don't use perfectly clean tap water — counterintuitively, bees prefer slightly mineralised water. A pinch of sea salt or a small piece of mossy stone added to the dish makes the water more attractive
  • Position low enough to refill easily — you'll be doing this often; make it accessible
  • In autumn/winter, repurpose as a small bird-feed dish — sunflower hearts, mealworms or a few suet pellets. Smaller garden birds (robins, blue tits, finches) will find it within days

The wildlife garden connection

A bee drinker like this is a small but genuinely useful piece of the wider wildlife-garden picture. The full set, with growing things in place, looks something like:

  • Plants the bees can feed from — borage, comfrey, lavender, foxgloves, sedum, the Plants for Pollinators seed range
  • Water for the bees to drink — this cuppy, plus shallow saucers placed around the garden
  • Bird feeding stations — like our ChapelWood Wild Wings — for the natural pest-control work that insectivorous birds do through the growing season
  • Bee hotels and nest boxes — for the solitary bees that don't live in hives
  • Organic pest controlbiological nematodes instead of chemicals, so the bees stay healthy
  • Wild corners — areas of unmown grass, log piles, leaf piles, and slightly-untidy spots that support insect life

It all builds quietly, season on season, into the kind of garden where pollinators thrive and the kitchen window framed view is genuinely full of moving wings.

As a gift

The cuppy is one of those genuinely thoughtful garden gifts — functional, decorative, and quietly meaningful. Particularly suited to:

  • A new gardener setting up their first garden — a small piece of considered garden equipment that does real work
  • A pollinator-conscious gardener — the kind of person who already knows about bees and would appreciate this kind of detail
  • A grandparent or older gardener — properly thoughtful, properly useful
  • Mother's Day, birthday, Christmas — particularly with the matching creature design picked for the recipient (a frog for the pond-keeper, a butterfly for the cottage-garden type, a swallow for the romantic)

Specifications

  • Type: Decorative bee/butterfly water dish; dual use as small bird-feed dish
  • Material: Durable metalwork for year-round outdoor use
  • Designs available: 11 variants including bees, butterflies, birds, dragonflies, frog, lizard and swallow
  • Position: Outdoor garden, sheltered from wind, within sight of where you spend time
  • Use: Bee drinker (summer); small bird-feed dish (autumn/winter)

A small thought: the gardens that quietly attract the most pollinators aren't necessarily the showiest ones. They're the ones where someone has thought about the small things — a shallow water dish, a wild corner, a few flowering herbs left to bolt, organic pest control rather than chemicals. The cuppy is one of those small things. Add it to the garden and within a few weeks, on a hot afternoon, you'll find yourself standing at the window watching bees drink from it. One of the proper small pleasures of a working summer garden.

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SKU: 68239361517

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Brandi
Louisville, US
★★★★★ 5
Good book
Format: Kindle
This is my first book by this author and I loved it so much. Such a cute story. I absolutely loved reading Knox and Avery's story. Knox is a motocross racer and Avery is a gymnast. Knox lost his spot with his team for not being a team player. He is bummed out because racing has been all he really wanted to do. Knox lost his mom when he was a teenager and he took on a pretty big responsibility helping take care of his brothers. He has an older brother who went to college and then two younger ones that also ended up going to college and then there's the youngest one that's a senior in high school. Knox is a great big brother but really wants to race so his friend Colter, who does freestyle tricks on bikes, talks him into trying to do trick riding too. Avery hurt her knee a bit ago which she did therapy for but is really aware of her knee now and just doesn't have the confidence like she used too. Avery goes out with her friend to a party to get out of her head and there she sees Knox. He's on his bike but he almost got her and from there it starts there relationship of having snarky comments to each other. Avery helped Knox' friend Colter do some gymnastic workouts to get his strength and learn some tricks for his trick riding. Colter recommends Knox work with her too. Knox takes him up on this because Knox needs this to show people in motocross racing he can be a team player. Knox and Avery end up getting a long better and you can feel the chemistry between the two but both don't want a relationship for different reasons. Things heat up between the two of them. Lots more happen in this book and you will want to read to find out what that is. Will Avery and Knox be able to get over their fears and be together? Have to read to find out. Thank you Rebecca Jenshak for this book.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 28, 2024
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Rachel C.
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 4
Solid start to a new series! Love the Holland brothers
Format: Kindle
There is one thing I've learned when I read Rebecca books: I either love them and am obsessed (looking at you "Tutoring the Player") or I really like them, but feel like there's something missing. And this book fell in the latter. Ok, so, I did really enjoy this book. I was so excited to get to know the younger Hollands after meeting Hendrick in "Tempting the Player." I was so intrigued by their dynamics, so when I saw those Holland brothers were getting a series, I was SOLD. And I'm not gonna lie, I really enjoyed grumpy and closed-off Knox Holland. The relationship he has with his brothers is special, but especially the one he has with his youngest brother, Flynn. And that, alone, made me fall in love with him. But watching as Avery wore him down, without even trying, was the best. And how he didn't even realize it was happening? Even better. Avery was awesome! I LOVED her! She's had a rough go after an injury at the end of her freshman year at Valley U, and it's really rocked her confidence as she works to come back. She was funny and the way she fit in with the Holland brothers was perfect... especially the way she cared for Flynn. I loved the banter and way she goes back and forth with Brogan too. That guy is hilarious. She just...fits, and they all can see it. The only thing that kept this from a 5 star for me was that it just felt like it...ended. We have the conflict, we get back together, but then, it's a super quick last chapter, no epilogue, and it's over. I really wanted to see at least a little more of them as an official couple. I do love how you could see how close she and Flynn are in the last chapter. And how even though the others have moved on to other things (Archer and Brogan the NFL, Henny and Jane are married), they're still such a tight family unit. There is a super short but sweet epilogue you can get at the end of the book if you sign up for Rebecca's newsletter (which, duh, I already get because I do love her books!). Overall, I really enjoyed this book, but I have to say, the level of excitement I have for Archer and Flynn, but Archer especially, is next level!
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Reviewed in the United States on June 22, 2025
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Mandy
Draper, US
★★★★★ 5
I loved it so much!!!
Format: Kindle
I've had this one on my TBR lis forever and been meaning to get to it. Considering I picked up the ebook last year not long after it came out. I can't believe I let this one sit on my kindle for as long as I did. I ended up starting and finishing in just one afternoon absolutely hooked on Avery and Knox. They has this connection that just works even if they are to stubborn to see what's happening. I loved the whole bad buy meets the good girl in this sweet steamy enemies to lovers romance. The author does a beautiful job creating a captivating story with characters you can't help falling in love with. This is my first book by the author and I'm a fan as I enjoyed every moment of Avery and Knox's story. I loved that we get to know a little bit of Knox's brothers as the series is about them and can't wait to devour there stories too. Highly recommend the characters are engaging and the story is perfectly balanced with just the right amount of romance. This one made me want to look up the riding that Knox did off season and it's impressive. I loved it!!! One of my favorite books of 2025.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2025
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Lisa G
New York, US
★★★★★ 4
Good Sports Romance
Format: Kindle
Knox is a motor cross racer and Avery is a gymnast. Seems like opposites, right? But there is much more common ground. This couple is fantastic together and love the friends and family vibes. Can’t wait to read the rest of the books in the Holland Brothers series and go back to read Hendrick and Jane’s story.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2026
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Verified Purchase
Rebecca
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 5
Holland Brothers Series !!!
Format: Kindle
5/5 ⭐️ 2/5 🌶️ A Holland Brothers Series was exactly what i was hoping for since i read Tempting the Player. Rebecca gave us all exactly what we wanted a Holland brother series and kicked it off with Knox. Knox is the broody, grumpy, closed off, and the 2nd oldest brother who stepped up and held down the fort taking care of the younger brothers after their mom passed and dad stopped coming around but gave up his dreams/ wants in order to do so. With Hendrix, the oldest brother from TTP, back home Knox can go live out his dream as a pro motocross rider. After something goes down between him and his teammate, he’s left without a team and ends up back home and ends up asking the help of a friend of a friend to train him who is Avery. Avery is a college gymnast with two Olympic medals and last season she choked and injured herself before she was able to compete. She’s doesn’t want a distraction but agrees to train Knox which should be easy but it turns out to be anything but that. The banter and argue and then everything changing when his shirt comes off and she spends a little too much time admiring his body in a handstand. These two balanced each other out so well it’s hard to deny even to them. Overall i loved the plot and the character development between these two, the spice, the banter, the nicknames it was all just …..chefs kiss 💋. I cant wait to see which Holland brother Rebecca has in store for us next! 🏍️ Sports Romance 👑 Opposites Attract 🏍️Enemies to Lovers 👑 Train Together 🏍️ Banter 👑 Motorcross x Gymnast 🏍️ Bad Boy x Good Girl
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Reviewed in the United States on April 24, 2025

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