Puzzling question for choosing the correct plant

Harrisburg, PA

Hello guys!
I need some expert suggestion about a puzzling situation in my garden.
Few years ago I built a nice walkway in my small backyard garden with some concrete stones. The walkway is a narrow straight line 21 feet long x 3 feet wide (approximately). Every year I use to plant boarding annuals along the walkway. I use decorative flowering plant of an height not superior of 3 feet that bloom all the summer long. This year I decide to make a great improvement on my walkway by planting some boarding perennial that must follow some specific requirements:

a. Th plant MUST be a good bee plant (my garden is a pollinator oriented garden, ALL the plant that I have must feed bumblebee, otherwise I will not use it!!)
b. The plant has to be relatively drought tolerant , I live in central PA where the rain is abundant, and for an ecologic reason I want some plant that can be happy with a single or double good water irrigation per week.
c. The plant has to be no taller than 3 feet
d. Has to bloom continuously from late spring to early fall.
e. must be suited for a full sun position
f. Cold hardy in my area ( area 6-7)

In the past i made some trials with mixed feeling result with the following annuals:
a. Impatients: very good display, really majestic effect, but require too much water in full sun and by the end of september the plant die inexorably, moreover the plant was not bee friendly.
b. Marigold, I used a single flowering type, the plant was very resistant to the moderate irrigation regimen, bee friendly, but marigold have the bad habit to drastically reduce their bloom during the hot summer month, where I need the most for feed bumblebee and for aesthetic purposes.
I was thinking on two possible options:

A)COREOPSIS VERTICILLATA (Tickseed, Big Bang Series )
B) LEUCANTHEMUM (Victorian secret)
However the problem with coreopsis is that the flower are relatively small, although colorful, and the plant are not usually that big.
And Leucanthemum has a very good flower size dispay BUT need a good deal of deadhanding (that become very difficult with a stretch of 2 X 20 feet garden border) and does not provide a good alternation of color (it come just in white) that I would prefer.
I know there are quite a bit of requirements, but for this reason I am asking to you guys considering your superior knowledge and bigger experience in gardening.
I attached the picture of my walkway to gave you an idea what I am talking about...

Thumbnail by LanfrancoLeo
Calgary, AB(Zone 3b)

What's do you mean by a "boarding perennial"?

Harrisburg, PA

Sorry,
I mean a perennial plant which can be suited to border the walkway, that does not develop too much in height, likewise the impatients that you can see in the picture...

Reno, NV(Zone 6b)

How about bee balm?

Calgary, AB(Zone 3b)

Even in our very short season, there are hardy any border perennials that will bloom the whole season through... and your season is a great deal longer than ours, being in a much warmer zone. The secret to constant bloom is planting a variety of species.

Scott County, KY(Zone 5b)

And the secret to supporting bees (and all local pollinators) is to use flowering plants native to your area - at least. You can sure supplement with additional species that meet your criteria, but it's a mistake to leave out those plants that those bees/pollinators "grew up with".

I agree with Bee Balm (Monarda sp.) of which there are several colors. Seems like other species in the Mint family would work, too. Catmint, Salvia, Goldenrod, Joe Pye Weed, and some of the smaller Milkweed species would be excellent additions to your border planting.

These images are several Milkweed species (Asclepias sp.).

Thumbnail by ViburnumValley Thumbnail by ViburnumValley Thumbnail by ViburnumValley Thumbnail by ViburnumValley Thumbnail by ViburnumValley

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