muddy hands

Articles in this series

 Making room for wildlife
 A year in the wildlife garden
 The wildflower garden
 Go chemical free!
 The water garden
 Help us eradicate pond pests
 The night garden
 Midsummer magic
 Weeds of mass domination
 American connections
 Love your creepy-crawlies
 Home sweet home
 Childs play
 Treasure trove
 Eternal sunshine of the wildlife garden
 Devils darning needles
 The bare necessity
 For peats sake

Wildlife Gardening

Child’s play


Lift a stone and discover a bustling city of ants and earwigs; sit quietly and see how close a blackbird comes; dip a jam jar in the garden pond and examine the multitude of life that fills it; count butterflies, follow bees and dig for worms. There’s just so much to excite and interest children in a wildlife garden.

With the long summer holidays just around the corner, now’s a great time to think about involving children in your wildlife gardening. It’s not just a matter of keeping them interested and busy - learning about and enjoying wildlife in safe, familiar surroundings will help children grow to appreciate and care for it as they get older.

As well as spotting and watching wildlife, children just love projects which actually encourage more wildlife into the garden, with visible results. Here are some project ideas for a fun summer of wildlife gardening with the kids.


Wormwatch
It’s difficult to watch earthworms close up in the garden, but it’s quite easy create a simple wormery to get a worm’s eye view of their activities!

You will need:

The largest empty clear plastic drinks bottle you can find

  • A piece of cloth
  • A rubber band
  • Scissors
  • Fallen leaves
  • Sand
  • Soil from the garden
  • Worms from the garden - check out spaces under flagstones


Punch some small drainage holes in the base of the bottle (not big enough for a worm - ask an adult to help with this). Cut the top off the bottle so you can put things in. Build up layers of sand, soil and leaves in the bottle. You should see the layers clearly. Gently put a few (5 - 10) earthworms into your wormery. Cover the top with a piece of cloth fixed with a rubber band and put the wormery in a dark place. Make sure the soil stays moist and after a few days you will see how the worms’ burrowing activity mixes the layers.

After a week or 10 days you should release your worms back where you found them - with their newly mixed soil!


Lacewing Hotel
Lacewings are loved by wildlife gardeners because their larvae eat plant-sucking aphids. From early August they’re looking for shelters for the coming cooler months - here’s how to make one for them:

  • Cut the base off a large plastic bottle using scissors (ask an adult to help with this). Keep the lid on.
  • Roll up about 100cm of corrugated cardboard so it fits loosely inside the bottle and doesn’t poke out.
  • Push a piece of wire through the bottle sides and across the bottom to stop the cardboard falling out, and bend the ends round.
  • Using a piece of strong string tied around the neck of the bottle, hang the hotel up in a tree, shrub, hedge or against a fence in a climbing plant - near outside lights or lit windows is particularly good.
  • Some people take the shelters into sheds from November to February to protect them from frost.


Snug as a bug
If you don’t already have a dry stone wall or log pile in your garden, why not make one of these shelters especially for housing mini-beasts?

  • Space logs or sticks 10 - 15 cm apart in rows. Build up several layers of logs placed in alternating directions. You could even use drawing pins to fix a sheet of plastic over the top.
  • Build a stick wigwam - lean four sticks together like a pyramid, ends stuck in the ground and tops tied together with string. Now build up the sides with other sticks. The natural gaps they leave provide enough access for insect guests, while inside will be warm and sheltered.
  • If you can get some stones 15 -20cm across or more, or some pieces of broken clay flower pot, try to mimic the spaces in a dry stone wall by building a small cairn
fallen leaf
West Garden Survey
Help us find out about the region's wildlife by watching your garden over the summer months. We've teamed up with the Western Daily Press to organise this survey see their website for details

Articles in this series

 Making room for wildlife
 A year in the wildlife garden
 The wildflower garden
 Go chemical free!
 The water garden
 Help us eradicate pond pests
 The night garden
 Midsummer magic
 Weeds of mass domination
 American connections
 Love your creepy-crawlies
 Home sweet home
 Childs play
 Treasure trove
 Eternal sunshine of the wildlife garden
 Devils darning needles
 The bare necessity
 For peats sake

Treasure trove


Not so long ago wild flowers, butterflies and even birds’ eggs were collected in their thousands by early naturalists - just take a look in your local museum! Sadly even though we should know better now-a-days, some people still take rare species from the wild. But it’s much better for wildlife - and more fun - to watch, observe and keep a nature diary instead.

Find an old file or notebook, decorate the cover and write your name in it. This is your Nature Diary, and you can write in it as often as you like about the plants, insects and animals you see in your garden or when you’re out and about. With each entry try to include the date (put in the year so you can remember it when you are 100 years old!), the weather conditions and the place.

To begin with, maybe you could draw a map of your local area, mark your favourite places on it and write about why they matter to you. Try to find out about special wildlife places nearby by asking your local Wildlife Trust or people you know.

Wildlife observations can be done any time any where. You might just see something - an unusual bird in the garden or a bright butterfly on your way to the park - and decide to record it in your diary. Or you could set out to do a special wildlife watch session, in which case you could take reference books, binoculars, a camera and a notebook along with you (plus a snack as you’re bound to get a bit hungry).

As well as your notes and drawings, your nature diary could also be illustrated with photos, maps, postcards, cuttings and leaflets. If you find anything of interest like feathers, fur, fallen leaves or empty seed cases these can be stuck in too, with information about where and when you found them.

For starters, why not follow the bees and butterflies that visit your garden or local wild meadow and note down which colour of flowers they prefer. Or you could take a closer look at creepy crawlies by building a pit-fall trap - sink an empty yoghurt container into the ground and see what falls into it. This works particularly well in meadowland or grassland, or you could try doing it at the edge of your lawn. You can put different tasty morsels in the pot such as cheese or fruit, and see what food attracts what insects. Don’t forget to let your mini-monsters go when you have finished recording them in your nature diary.

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