Posted by Someone on May 6, 2006, 2:41 pm
Could anyone tell me how i could attract wild life into my garden? All i
have is 3 blank lawns, with a few plants, no shrubs or anything. What could
i do, at low cost?
Sharon.
Posted by shazzbat on May 6, 2006, 2:51 pm
> Could anyone tell me how i could attract wild life into my garden? All i
> have is 3 blank lawns, with a few plants, no shrubs or anything. What
> could
> i do, at low cost?
A pond. All life needs water. You get water, it attracts wildlife.
Steve
Posted by K on May 6, 2006, 3:13 pm
>> Could anyone tell me how i could attract wild life into my garden? All i
>> have is 3 blank lawns, with a few plants, no shrubs or anything. What
>> could
>> i do, at low cost?
>>
>A pond. All life needs water. You get water, it attracts wildlife.
Remember 'wildlife' means the whole lot, vertebrate and invertebrate. If
you want birds, you need the bugs for them to feed on. Don't use
insecticides.
Don't be too tidy. And leave seedheads for seed eating birds to feed on.
At low cost - try to simulate a woodland edge - grass, shrubs, perhaps a
small tree or two. Grow a lot of native species - they'll be host to a
wider range of insects for the rest of your wildlife to live on. Buy one
of Michael Chinery's books on wildlife in the garden so you start to
recognise the things that you see around - birds, butterflies are
obvious and showy, but there's a lot of enjoyment in watching the less
obvious inhabitants.
--
Kay
Posted by La Puce on May 6, 2006, 4:33 pm
K wrote:
> >A pond. All life needs water. You get water, it attracts wildlife.
> Remember 'wildlife' means the whole lot, vertebrate and invertebrate. If
> you want birds, you need the bugs for them to feed on. Don't use
> insecticides.
> Don't be too tidy. And leave seedheads for seed eating birds to feed on.
> At low cost - try to simulate a woodland edge - grass, shrubs, perhaps a
> small tree or two. Grow a lot of native species - they'll be host to a
> wider range of insects for the rest of your wildlife to live on. Buy one
> of Michael Chinery's books on wildlife in the garden so you start to
> recognise the things that you see around - birds, butterflies are
> obvious and showy, but there's a lot of enjoyment in watching the less
> obvious inhabitants.
Yes to all this!! Today my son screamed from the garden that an amazing
butterfly was on the blossoms of the apple tree. It was a Peacock
butterfly! Our nettles have been the perfect place for them to thrive.
We've had lots of Red Admirals and Brimstones and large Whites but
seeing the Peacock today has made our day :o)
Posted by Pest Effects on May 6, 2006, 4:33 pm
You should start at the bottom of the food chain... A diverse range of
plants
will attract a diverse range of invertibrates which in turn will
attract
vertibrates. Before very long, you'll have David Attenborough
swinging from
your trees!
--
Pest Effects
> have is 3 blank lawns, with a few plants, no shrubs or anything. What
> could
> i do, at low cost?