We use cookies on this website. To use the website as intended please accept cookies.

Sunday April 28 , 2024

Blue Daisy Blog

Blue Daisy blog written by Nicki Jackson & Jules Clark - for news, views, garden design, gardening and plant observations and thoughts.

Garden Design Quick Tip - Sound and Wildflower Meadows

Posted by on in Garden Design
  • Font size: Larger Smaller
  • Hits: 6308
  • 0 Comments
  • Subscribe to this entry
  • Print

4-weston-2-426Sound isn’t a principle of garden design as such, more a bi-product of it, but it is something that adds ambience and mood to a garden and contributes to that feeling of unity and harmony that we so often strive for in our garden designs.  There are many ways of getting sound into our gardens; the trickling of gently running water or the gushing of fast flowing waterfalls; the rustling of leaves in the trees or grasses in the borders dancing to the breeze; but one of the most uplifting sounds we can generate in our gardens is that of life itself.  Birds chirping, bees and other flying insects buzzing, creatures rustling around in the undergrowth – these are the sounds of a vibrant and bio diverse garden and plants play a key role in attracting the animals and insects that add to that valuable ecosystem.

 

There’s another upside to attracting those sound-makers to our gardens too because our gardens have the potential to play a key role in the UK’s sustainable future.  While natural habitats are being continually eroded through development the UK’s 15 million gardens can help replace some of that lost habitat for the fauna that rely on them. 97% of the UK’s natural wildflower meadows have been lost for instance, but as gardeners we have the capability to put some of that wildflower meadow ‘back’ by incorporating some of our own in our garden planting schemes.

Wildflower meadows are beautiful to look at, can suit and complement a garden design but crucially can attract up to 500% more insect numbers than our more monocultural lawns do – and with those insects and pollinators come the sound of vibrant ‘life’ and industry that add so much to our gardens.  

For optimal biodiversity at Blue Daisy we work with perennial wildflower meadow turf because it is also low maintenance, is already established, is guaranteed to work, will come back year after year and has a minimum of 30 UK native species of plants in them – a wildflower meadow on a roll if you will; but sowing wildflower meadows from seed, or manually planting a wildflower meadow will also produce those nectar and pollen rich plants that will attract those sound making insects to our gardens and, in turn, help maintain this key resource and support system that is under threat.  They might not have all of the benefits that we believe wildflower turf has but they are still a viable way of getting those crucial wildflowers into our gardens.  We mustn't forget that we are part of the whole ecosystem dependency chain – we might be far up on it but we are still dependent upon the health of the system far below us, so by improving the biodiversity of our gardens not only are we adding aesthetic and sensory depth to the enjoyment of them, through the look of the wildflower meadow and the sounds of life that depend upon them, but we’re also helping ourselves.

This blog’s garden design tip very short, sweet and simple: incorporate some wildflower meadow in your garden.  You won’t regret it and the animals, insects and birds that will benefit from it will thank you for it – you’ll be able to hear them doing so.

If this has whetted your appetite get in touch for more information (or for advice on how to achieve a wildflower meadow area in your garden).

0
Trackback URL for this blog entry.

Comments

  • No comments made yet. Be the first to submit a comment

Leave your comment

Guest Sunday, 28 April 2024

Blog Categories

Tag Cloud

Carol Klein Fleece Snowdrops water conservation build spring garden roof gardens repetition Narcissus hard landscaping Stone Lane Gardens watering Great British Garden Revival Briza maxima Winter shrubs poppies Joseph Banks ornamental grasses colour in your garden Kew Gardens Euphorbia Buxus Herb garden Urban Heat Island Effect Phyllostachys nigra doddington hall Charlie Dimmock HNC winner Jekka McVicar sound in the garden Crocus CorTen garden design Spring shrubs form productive garden ash Floating Paradise Gardens of London cyclamen winter garden contemporary movement in the garden legacy gift planning your garden courtyard Ashwood Nurseries spring bulbs garden design trends Hidcote Lantra reclaimed materials snow career in horticulture cottage gardens Selfridges Roof Garden Wildflowers birch sunflowers roof garden pond bulbs autumn garden Kensington Roof Garden Monty Don Stoneleigh patio Kelmarsh Hall Toby Buckland Echinacea rococo topiary blue eco-friendly Taxus garden design tip Greenhouse sorbus April garden Shrubs drought National Trust gravel basil Urban Heat Island Prince Harry Trees plant pots RHS Tatton Park ha ha Levens Hall alpines RHS grow your own Cloches September garden Absorb pollution Cosmos astrosanguineus bees London Capability Brown surfaces Seed sowing Events & Shows rock gardens edible garden show RHS Chelsea summer garden Chelsea Flower Show February Mrs Loudon Herb February garden Ilex Coastal plants Decking July garden bulb display March garden RHS Malvern Birmingham Library James Wong saving water Acuba Perennial Malvern Spring Show HTA Gardeners World Horticulture Tom Hart-Dyke Alan Titchmarsh Horticulturalist timber elm Joanna Lumley New York Highline terracota heatwave Cambridge botanical garden National Gardening Week water garden advice at home grey water Berginia pollinating insects pollinators structure garden focal points twitter kitchen garden garden room Rachel de Thame front garden unity Garden Planning November garden show gardens Highgrove stonemarket August garden Hosta May garden sweat peas wild flowers vertical garden rainwater harvesting Nicki Jackson Achillea Chelsea Physic Garden plants wildlife garden RHS Hampton Court BBC women and work award herbaceous borders Futurescape kerb-side appeal hosepipe gardening on tv Glasshouse scented shrubs Malvern Hills GYO NSALG Daffodils hydroponic John Massey recycled materials composting paving cottage garden rosemary traditional style Horticultural Cut flowers Sophie Raworth house plants acer Lawrence Johnston watering can Laurel December garden Bamboo Wisley green spaces Chris Beardshaw CorTen steel Moss Bank Park Berberis water feature October garden water butt June garden Matt James Alys Fowler January garden Joe Swift Geranium herbs deer lawn care Blue Daisy pests

Welcome to Blue Daisy Blog



Our Promise

promiseWe work hard to keep our customers happy.  We work to a voluntary customer charter.

Peace of Mind

simplybusinessWe take our responsibilities seriously so we're insured through Simply Business.

Click on the logo for our Garden Design insurance details. For Gardening details see our gardening services page.

Proud Members Of...

landscapejuicen... The Landscape Juice Network where we interact with other professional gardeners, designers and landscapers.