
Wildlife is wonderful to have flying about your space, which is why you want to encourage it as much as possible for the benefit of your garden.
Not only is it a wonderful view to be able to lounge outside with all the wildlife buzzing or flying about you, but it can help to boost your garden’s growth of plants and flowers through cross-pollination.
With that in mind, here are some helpful tips to create a wildlife-friendly garden in six easy steps.
- Build a pond
A pond is a great way to attract local wildlife, and if you’re willing to throw in a few fish, then this will assist with additional wildlife finding its way into your outdoor space.
Of course, any body of water, like a pond or a lake, will need regular maintenance. Lake weed removal is important, as is making sure any ponds or lakes are well fenced off from little ones and pets.
Not everyone will find a pond to be useful or wanted in the garden, but if you’re looking to encourage a variety of wildlife, from frogs to pond skaters, then installing a pond might be a good idea.
- Compost food waste
To help nourish your soil and attract bugs of all kinds, you should look to compost any and all food waste that you can. Composting food waste is a great way to reduce the amount of waste that goes directly into your trash bin, but also to improve soil health and therefore attract wildlife.
Compost also reduces the need for chemical fertilizers and pesticides, which can do damage to the environment over time.
- Feed the birds
Birds are a great addition to your garden, and they can be a great way to encourage more wildlife, like squirrels, to the garden too.
Feeding the birds with bird feeders and bird houses so that they can also nest is helpful to the environment. By giving them food and shelter, you’re helping them flourish and thrive in an environment that’s constantly changing. Not only that, but as more green space makes way for property, these bird boxes and bird feeders are crucial.
- Native plant selection
Try to select plants that are native to your local area, rather than choosing any species that might otherwise harm the ecosystem. As wonderful as some species of plants and flowers can look, you might be endangering your other native plants as a result.
Try to select the plants that will thrive in your space so that your investment of time and money is well spent, too.
- Let the grass grow
Letting the grass grow is a good way of encouraging wildlife to come into your garden and make it their home. If you’re cutting down the grass too short and too regularly, then it’s not going to allow certain wildlife the opportunity to make use of it.
Creating a wildlife-friendly garden is important, so make use of these tips to transform yours into a wildlife haven.
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