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| 1 | 2 | 3 | » Stats |
Members: 48,633
Threads: 78,838
Posts: 820,939
Top Poster: glsammy (14,776) | | Welcome to our newest member, yvonnem | |  | | 
12-04-2007, 12:28 AM
| | Wild Member | | Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Sheffield, South Yorkshire
Posts: 164
| | | WAB Members' Garden Photos I've been thinking it would be nice to have, perhaps, an on-going stickied thread in the Wildlife Gardening forum where people can post pictures of their gardens. Of ponds and bogs, flower borders, meadows, log piles, hedges, newt caves and toad holes. Whatever they may be doing or whatever may be happening at the moment.
The kind of thing that doesn't really merit starting a new thread but could still be very interesting/educational for most of us to see. I love seeing what other people are doing with their gardens and nicking their ideas.
It would be great to have more idea of what people are doing (see goosey) and be able to see things develop. A chance too for the truly hopeless WAB photographer to show off their skills.
All in favour say chrysanthemum. | 
12-04-2007, 12:54 AM
|  | Knight of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Sheffield
Posts: 8,627
| | | Re: WAB Members' Garden Photos Quote:
Originally Posted by Lords and Ladies I've been thinking it would be nice to have, perhaps, an on-going stickied thread in the Wildlife Gardening forum where people can post pictures of their gardens. Of ponds and bogs, flower borders, meadows, log piles, hedges, newt caves and toad holes. Whatever they may be doing or whatever may be happening at the moment.
The kind of thing that doesn't really merit starting a new thread but could still be very interesting/educational for most of us to see. I love seeing what other people are doing with their gardens and nicking their ideas.
It would be great to have more idea of what people are doing (see goosey) and be able to see things develop. A chance too for the truly hopeless WAB photographer to show off their skills.
All in favour say chrysanthemum. | Chrisandthemum ... never could spell
Ok Lords and Ladies, lets see how the thread progresses.
So, how does your garden grow?
Send some information about your patch. What wildlife visitors frequent your garden. What you did to attract the species. What advice can you give to others. How you transformed a sterile space into a wildlife sanctuary!
Right, where’s my garden diary
PS .. where in Sheffield are you | 
12-04-2007, 10:07 AM
|  | Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 3,421
| | | Re: WAB Members' Garden Photos Great thread! Ha, you try and stop me posting once my garden gets going. | 
12-04-2007, 12:42 PM
| | Member of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 311
| | | Re: WAB Members' Garden Photos Yes, good idea as I too enjoyed looking at goosey's website.
Susie, can we have some "before" and "after" photos then? | 
12-04-2007, 02:31 PM
|  | Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 3,421
| | | Re: WAB Members' Garden Photos This is the garden not long after we moved to the house in December. The pots and bird feeders are mine. The conifers were cut back very hard before we moved in, they were over 25 feet high when we viewed the house and cut out a lot of light but what was left was just unattractive stumps. They had to go.
About six weeks ago we started work on the garden. It was a mud bath for a while.
There was a lot of stuff to shift to the dump. Then it was time to repair and paint the fence - the only thing holding it up had been the trees.
Basic planting in (trees and such like) and flower beds dug. Time to start work on the wildlife pond.
Pond completed.
Finally, the main work is done and I have somewhere to sit and watch the garden grow.
Funnily enough, I still haven't sat on the swing seat though!
Now I just need everything to grow and hopefully bring in plenty of wildlife.
Last edited by FungiJohn; 01-05-2007 at 02:40 PM.
| 
12-04-2007, 04:49 PM
| | Member of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 311
| | | Re: WAB Members' Garden Photos Blimey, that's a fair amount of work to have accomplished in six weeks. I think you deserve a sit down on that new swing seat!
Ann | 
12-04-2007, 06:39 PM
|  | Knight Grand Cross of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Northants.
Posts: 11,277
| | | Re: WAB Members' Garden Photos | 
12-04-2007, 08:56 PM
|  | Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Aug 2006 Location: Letchworth Garden City
Posts: 1,366
| | | Re: WAB Members' Garden Photos Here are a couple from me. The first is a view down the garden from the house. Pond is just over the slate topped wall. Some of the trees that show at the end of the garden are on the railway embankment. We're waiting for moss to colonise the rather grey wall you can see. It is taking its time
The second is across the pond at the beginning of May last year. Note the early season's growth of the rampant native water lily. | 
12-04-2007, 09:41 PM
| | Wild Member | | Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Sheffield, South Yorkshire
Posts: 164
| | | Re: WAB Members' Garden Photos Some great gardens and some great lumberjacking! Smartie, that looks like paradise Quote:
Originally Posted by FungiJohn PS .. where in Sheffield are you  | I'm in the 'lovely' side of Sheffield  Ecclesall area, not that close but not a million miles away from Ecclesall wood. | 
12-04-2007, 09:43 PM
| | Wild Member | | Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Sheffield, South Yorkshire
Posts: 164
| | | Re: WAB Members' Garden Photos My garden is of the back-to-back terrace variety. The greatest gardening difficulty being somewhat restricted sunlight. In the height of summer half of it gets sunlight and none gets any early morning of evening sun. In the depths of winter, almost no direct sunlight at all. Good for ferns. They really didn't think of wildlife gardening when they built these things. Most of the gardens are seperated by inpenetrable brick walls so anything that doesn't fly or climb well has a bit of a struggle.
This is the dark side of the garden. Pond infront, bog garden behind, obligatory log pile, cat for scale.
The pond has ended up quite formal looking, not exactly planned that way but it fits in. It's mainly home to ramshorn snails and the clumsy collared doves come down to drink from time to time. I did get a couple of dragonfly visitors last year though I didn't see them land. I'd love to have dragonflies crawling out of the water. There's the native marsh marigold in one corner and what looks like a different type of marsh marigold with white flowers in another. There's also a blue iris which flowers well and a bulrush/reedmace type thing that has singularly failed to do anything of note. No pond skaters though, it's probably a little too small.
Here's the bog garden. Don't be fooled by its weird looking green blobbyness, it is infact 'an authentic moorland peat bog' (if you ignore the primula, cowslip and pitcher plant.)
I'm afraid it is real peat, I can't really justify it but it's hard to do without it and I don't use peat anywhere else. The blobby greeness is sphagnum moss intended for hanging baskets. I hoped it would either root or contain seed. No sign of either so far but it helps the hillocks from washing away in heavy rain... There are a few strands of living sphagnum in there which I hope, in time, will spread as much as possible. The tall spikey plants are some type of rush (they make nice reed lights) and the plants you can't see are cotton grass (sorry the picture is pretty bad). There's a bilberry/whortleberry cutting in there too that seems to have taken, or at least not died. I'd like to grow some sundews there but it really doesn't get enough light.
Apart from getting some odd looks, it has greatly increased the number of midges in the garden and it attracts wasps, who land there to drink. I cannot see why they aren't more popular.
That's the dark side of the garden.
And then I was attacked by the Beast of Bodmin.
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