
Has there ever been a time when we have been more grateful for our gardens’ wildlife? It’s been one of the silver linings of lockdown, up there with Joe Wicks and ‘Milk and More’ home deliveries (that would be Wines Direct for Caroline). So let’s say thank you to all our birds, animals and insects by providing a little more of what they like.
Here are our tips on some simple things you can do to make your
1. Choose a multifunctional tree. Let’s think of your

2. Go for proven pollinator plants. Moving down a layer you need to take the right advice on plants for pollinators. As usual I like to follow the science so was delighted to find bee guru and author of ‘The

But I am also conducting my own

3.Recycle your leaves. Let’s finally examine the soil layer. No one rakes up the leaves in woods and their natural decay over centuries produces that lovely friable ‘brown earth’ loam that all gardeners aspire to and mini beasts love to live in. So rake up your leaves by all means, but store them in a pile in a corner somewhere and then dig them back into flower beds in a year or two, to give those earthworms something to nosh on.

So there we are, three simple resolutions you could make to create a better

Well, admittedly Laura has come up with a couple of useful suggestions but for all her lofty ecological theories how has she managed to omit absolutely the best thing you can put in your
4. Water. Literally any kind of water, from a margarine tub as a birdbath on your windowsill to a 7-acre lake. When we moved to our present
As is often the case, the tattier the pond, the more life it will support. Dragonfly larvae, newts, water-boatmen etc. etc. all prefer reedy, messy margins and masses of weed to reproduce happily, and the more of the little water critters you have, the more your water feature will attract the big ones – birds, grass snakes, mammals ………

5. Long Grass. Now, come on, do you HAVE to have that perfect British lawn treated to within an inch of its life with lawn-feeds, weedkillers, land-drains, aeration, scarification, ambition, distraction, uglification and derision (as the Mock Turtle would say…….)? Or, if you are screaming YES at me, could you bear to leave just a small area unmowed for the summer?
I’m not talking full-on ‘chocolate-box’ wildflower meadows here – unless you are up for endless tinkering and angst. No. Just try leaving a grass patch or two to grow long and cut it down in August. And if some dandelions and oxeye daisies take advantage – lovely! Grasshoppers, beetles, hoverflies, etc. will be waving their tiny legs in thanks. And your children can tick a few more boxes in their minibeast project.

6 Wellbeing. There has been an inordinate amount written recently about the healing effects of gardening and Nature during this frightening pandemical time. And rightly so. (Though I suspect I am already speaking to the converted here), being outside and having the time to look, really LOOK (and listen), has been a deeply important part for many of us coming to terms with what’s happened in the human world this year.
Ultimately, you should

Stick to the task Elaine, don’t go all Jane Austen on us. Here in the North we like practical solutions such as:
7. Gardening without chemicals. Now this is no small feat in Scotland. Your average Celtic slug is built like a brick sh*t-house. They laugh in the face of eggshells or wool pellets and don’t get me started on copper rings – do they even work? Let’s be honest, the toxic blue slug pellets and the ‘cheap as chips’ chemical aphid scooters were far more effective. However year on year without doubt the number of bees, butterflies and thrushes were dwindling in our

So my response, and maybe yours too, has been three-fold. I don’t grow hostas or other slug delicacies in my beds any more, only in pots that I can control better; I put up with a bit of caterpillar damage and feel quite good about it instead of furious, and I spray the aphids off my roses with soapy water instead of a chemical spray – seems just as effective.
And during lockdown, picking slugs off my beans after dark is passing for a ‘big night out’. Fitted out with headtorch and Marigolds (can’t actually touch a slug), I am 100% safe from attackers according to my husband.

8. Shelter: No you won’t get me making a box for pine martens Laura. I still bear a grudge since the disappearance of Clucky, my chicken, over two decades ago but luckily there’s nothing our wildlife loves more than a bit of tumble-down something to rest and shelter in.
Good news for me as neglected piles of leaves or general
Final point, hedges are much better for wildlife than wooden fences or walls. Hedgehogs etc can travel along them safely and move in between gardens. They say ‘a hedge between, keeps friendships green’ which leads me onto:
9. Neighbours: Just a word of warning here. While you may decide to ‘rewild’ your

Perhaps we could start off small and just have contained areas of wildness in our gardens away from the boundaries. Why not take a bottle round and share your objectives with your neighbours. Hopefully by the time the second one gets opened they’ll be on board and wanting to follow your lead.
10. Plant Louise’s Great Plant this Month (click on her box below)- a great choice for any wildlife
The Goulson Lab – Best garden flowers for bees
Recently out in paperback – The Garden Jungle or Gardening to Save the Planet


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2 replies on “10 different ways to thank our garden wildlife”
Great post, it’s wonderful to encourage wildlife into the garden. We installed a water feature during the coronavirus lockdown using this guide https://www.welshslatewaterfeatures.co.uk/how-to-install-a-water-feature/
Wow that’s quite a water feature they have there!