Create a Wildlife Garden
The most ordinary garden can become a wildlife haven offering
a diverse habitat for more creatures than can ever be found in
any natural environment of similar size. Conservation now focuses
on creating biological systems with all plants and animals interacting
and depending on each other. Ironically such systems are carefully
planned and managed and not just an excuse for letting nature
take over.
Plants provide the basis for these complex systems as these alone
can convert sunlight into living material. Apart from nectar,
fruits, seeds and vegetation for food, plants also provide the
structures for breeding, resting, hibernating and shelter which
attract regular visitors and residents. As gardeners are all to
well aware some of these such as aphids, slugs or caterpillars
can cause considerable damage when the system is out of balance
and predators not present in sufficient numbers to keep things
under control. Apart from stealing our plums, wasps collect large
numbers of insects to feed their larvae; ladybirds and hoverfly
larvae eat their way through colonies of greenfly. Frogs and hedgehogs,
apart from the unseen ground beetle, find the slug a moorish,
tasty morsel.
The following suggests a range of easily obtainable plants that
would attract wild life into your garden.
BUTTERFLIES
Tall - Buddleia davidii, hebe,
Medium - Michaelmas daisy, hemp agrimony, sweet william,
red valerian, Sedum spectabile, Anchusa.
Short - Hyssop, Primula denticulate, Marjoram, Aubretia,
Bugle, Arabis.
BIRDS
Apple, Berberis, Cotoneaster, Crab apple, Dogwood, Elder, Eleagnus,
Evening primrose, Fruit bushes, Guelder rose, Hawthorn, Holly,
Honeysuckle, Ivy, Privet, Pyracantha, Rowan, Sunflowers, Yew.
They also like some "weeds" ‑ Brambles, Chickweed,
Cow parsley, Dandelion, Groundsel, Plantains, Stinging nettles
and Thistles.
Amphibians like frogs, toads and newts will require a
pond preferebly without goldfish and with slopping sides.