This is the last blog-post about the general set-up of the wildlife areas in the garden. After this they will, I hope, chronicle developments as they happen from early spring onwards. But there are a few more things to point out that show how one can practise wildlife gardening in a small space, if that is all you have available.
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The Wildflower Meadow
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This looks like a patch of rough grass, allowed to get out of hand. Three years ago I lifted the turf from a one metre wide strip of lawn. I guess it is about two and a half metres long. On the bare soil I sowed it with "Urban Pollinator Mix" from Scotia Seeds. It has been rather overcrowded with Ox-eye daisies, and some of the plants enticingly on the label have not appeared so far. But is only a very limited site, and there are about half a dozen flowering plants. I hope I can show you them later in the year..
The water feature (we call it the ditch) is just using up the left-over pond liner. You may remember that I bought far too much. No special effort has been made to get native plants for it, and some of the pretty ones I bought seem to have died. But the two together - meadow and ditch - turned out last summer to be just what the baby frogs wanted. They could hide in the long grass or under the flagstones, and occasionally leap into the water if frightened. You will notice that the left hand end of the ditch has been made so that it is easy to climb out, a very important consideration. I did put some oxygenating weed and some pond snails in the water.
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The Cornfield Annuals
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This looks as unprepossessing a bit of mud as you could wish to find in a garden. But in late summer, I hope it will be blaze of colour and humming with pollinating insects. Every Eastertide at our church we give out a teaspoonful of seed of wildflower annuals, roughly enough for a square metre. (Scotia Seeds again; there is a lot to be said for getting fairly local plants if possible, and this garden is in Scotland.) We find that they self seed vigorously, so this area hardly needs new sowing. But they work well in pots too. This is what they looked like last summer.

The main work is weeding out those other self seeded plants which one happens not to want. There's no rule about this, of course.
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Ivy
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It is agreed by all the books that ivy is an outstanding plant for wildlife. I know this is true from my previous garden. Quite apart from invertebrates, birds eat the berries and find shelter, if not nests, in the foliage. It can also be a menace if it grows rampant and unchecked. Here I have, as you see, planted a couple of cuttings from a local park. But the main point of the trellis is so that every tendril that strays outside it shall be ruthlessly cut off. We shall see if this works.
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| The Almost Hedge |
One of the things I liked most in our old garden was the wild hedge. (It was not, in fact, a boundary.) About ten metres long, and with seven or eight varieties of native trees, some bought (hawthorn), some grown from seed collected by the wayside (guelder rose, oak and beech) and some just turned up (ash and elder and hazel).You can see in the photo what I have here. There is a discrete pile of logs, with some magnificent moss. Because we decided against a compost heap - a matter of space, and we do buy bags of compost made from our Garden Rubbish collection - I made a little cylinder of chicken wire and fill it with leaves, twigs, rotten apples and so on. The shrubs on either side are not "wild", but the birds who perch on them don't seem to mind. The bramble just turned up, and is not allowed to wander far.
Those of you who have read this blog from the beginning with know that this series of posts was inspired by one sentence from Colin Stafford-Johnson in his "Wild Gardener" programmes on BBC2: "Anyone who's got a little bit of land can make the land better for nature." I hope these introductory posts have seen that even without much space, and a good deal of that given over to lawns, "exotic" shrubs and so so, you can still try to make it better for nature. If you never use pesticides and herbicides, and provide a bit of water, you are unlikely to go far wrong.
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