• Search
  • About us
  • Jobs
  • Contact Us
  • Shop
  • Donate
  • Join Us
  • Wildlife
      • Local Wildlife
        • Wildlife Directory
      • Record Your Sighting
        • Nature Counts
      • Injured Animals & Emergencies
        • Local Wildlife Rescue Centres
        • Reporting Wildlife Crime
        • Wildfire safety advice
        • The Countryside Code
      • Image of Wildlife in Sheffield and Rotherham Reserve
        Wildlife in Sheffield and Rotherham

        Take a look, through some of the common species of wildlife that live in the South Yorkshire area around Sheffield and Rotherham.

  • Our Work
      • News
        • Conservation
        • Nature, Health & Wellbeing
        • Schools, Education & Outdoor Learning
        • Nature Reserves
        • Partnerships
        • Nature Recovery
        • Campaigning & Appeals
        • Events & Activities
        • Videos
      • Nature Recovery Programmes
        • Nature Based Solutions
        • Rotherham Rivers
      • Nature, Health & Wellbeing
        • Green and Blue Social Prescribing
        • Wild at Heart
        • Nextdoor Nature
      • Schools, Education & Outdoor Learning
        • Primary and Early Years
        • Secondary Schools
        • Further and Higher Education
        • Training and support
      • Evidence-led Conservation
        • What is Evidence-Led Conservation?
        • Working with Nature: Woodhouse Washlands
      • Partnerships
        • South Yorkshire Woodland Partnership
        • South Yorkshire Local Nature Partnership
        • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
        • Sheffield Lakeland Partnership
      • Advice & Consultancy
        • Wildscapes
        • The BNG Hub
        • Land Management Advice Service
  • Nature Reserves
      • Nature Reserves in Sheffield
        • Blacka Moor
        • Carbrook Ravine
        • Carr House Meadows
        • Crabtree Ponds
        • Fox Hagg
        • Greno Woods
        • Moss Valley Woodlands
        • Salmon Pastures
        • Sunnybank
        • Wyming Brook
      • Nature Reserves in Rotherham
        • Woodhouse Washlands
        • Centenary Riverside
        • Kilnhurst Ings
      • Special Conservation Spaces
        • Agden Bog
        • Hammond’s Field
      • Nature Friendly Farming
        • Ughill Farm
      • Image of Fox Hagg Reserve
        Fox Hagg

        A recently extended patch of heathland and woodland, neighbouring Wyming Brook.

  • Events & Activities
      • What's On
        • Volunteer Work Days
        • Family Events
        • Guided Walks
        • Online Events
        • View All Events
      • Activities
        • 30 Days Wild
        • Activities for Children
        • Activities for Adults
        • Nature Detectives!
  • Get Involved
      • Nature Recovery
        • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
        • Nature Recovery Sheffield
        • Nature Recovery Rotherham
        • Sheffield Swift City
        • New Government Priorities for Nature
      • Volunteering
        • Volunteer with us
      • Campaigning for Wildlife
        • # Defend Nature
        • Action for Insects
        • Badgers and bTB
        • Birds of Prey
        • Go peat free!
        • Our Moors
        • Wilder Future
      • Image of Badgers and bTB Reserve
        Badgers and bTB

        Help stop the badger cull coming to Sheffield and Rotherham!

  • Support us
      • Become a Member
        • Individual Membership
        • Joint Membership
        • Family Membership
        • Gift a Membership
        • Renew your Membership
      • Corporate Partnerships
        • Corporate Membership
        • Wild Work Days
        • Employee Wellbeing Packages
      • Make a Donation
      • Appeals
        • Taking Action for Nature Appeal
        • Acorn Fund
      • A Gift in Your Will
        • A Gift in their Memory
        • How Gifts Can Help us
      • Image of Kingfisher Magazine Reserve
        Kingfisher Magazine

        Unveil the hidden world of insects in Sheffield & Rotherham with the newest issue of Kingfisher magazine.

  • Join Us
  • Donate
  • Online Shop
  • About us
  • Jobs
  • Wildlife
    • Wildlife Directory
    • Nature Counts
    • Local Wildlife Rescue Centres
    • Reporting Wildlife Crime
    • Wildfire safety advice
    • The Countryside Code
  • Our Work
    • News
    • Nature, Health & Wellbeing
    • Evidence-led Conservation
    • Schools, Education & Outdoor Learning
    • South Yorkshire Woodland Partnership
    • South Yorkshire Local Nature Partnership
    • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
    • Sheffield Lakeland Partnership
    • Wildscapes
  • Nature Reserves
    • Agden Bog
    • Blacka Moor
    • Carbrook Ravine
    • Carr House Meadows
    • Crabtree Ponds
    • Fox Hagg
    • Greno Woods
    • Hammond’s Field
    • Moss Valley Woodlands
    • Salmon Pastures
    • Sunnybank
    • Wyming Brook
    • Woodhouse Washlands
    • Centenary Riverside
    • Kilnhurst Ings
    • Ughill Farm
  • Events & Activities
    • What's On
    • 30 Days Wild
    • Activities for Children
    • Activities for Adults
    • Nature Detectives!
  • Get Involved
    • Volunteer with us
    • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
    • Nature Recovery Sheffield
    • Nature Recovery Rotherham
    • Campaigning For Wildlife
  • Support us
    • Become a Member
      • Individual Membership
      • Family Membership
      • Joint Membership – Last chance!
      • Gift a Membership
    • Donate
  • Home
  • Get Involved
  • Wildlife Gardening
  • How to grow a wild patch

How to grow a wild patch

It doesn’t matter what size your space is, there’s always room for wildflowers! Set aside an area of lawn, part of a border, or even a large container and watch the bees and butterflies buzz in.

© long-patch-in-grass
  • Campaigning For Wildlife
  • Green and Blue Social Prescribing
  • Local community groups
  • Nature Adventures
  • Nature Friendly Gardening
  • Nature Recovery Rotherham
  • Nature Recovery Sheffield
  • Planning Issues
  • Planning Issues
  • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
  • Tree felling and wildlife protection
  • Volunteer with us
  • Wildlife Gardening
    • Help a hedgehog
    • How to attract bumblebees to your garden
    • How to attract butterflies to your garden
    • How to build a bat box
    • How to build a mini-pond
    • How to build a pond
    • How to build a pond
    • How to compost your waste
    • How to create a container garden for wildlife
    • How to create a hedgehog hole
    • How to encourage newts or other amphibians to your garden
    • How to feed birds in your garden
    • How to grow a wildlife-friendly garden
    • How to make a bee hotel
    • How to make a hedgehog house
    • How to make a log shelter
    • How to make a new build garden for wildlife
    • How to start a wildlife garden from scratch
    • How to grow a wild patch
    • Peat-free compost stockists near you
It doesn’t matter what size your space is, there’s always room for wildflowers! Set aside an area of lawn, part of a border, or a large container and watch the bees and butterflies buzz in.

Whether it’s a flowerpot or an entire meadow, planting wildflowers supports a wide range of insects that couldn’t survive in urban areas otherwise.

Option 1 – Let your grass grow long

Long grass, peppered with flowers, is incredibly beneficial for wildlife. Patches of long grass encourage different plant species to grow, help insects to thrive, provide food for birds, and shelter small mammals.

So simply let nature move in! Set aside some lawn, leave it to grow, and wait to see what arrives. The less pristine the lawn, the better it is for wildlife. If you want to make it look more “looked after”, just raise the cutters on your mower to make some paths and leave the rest of the mowing until July or August after plants have flowered.

Option 2 – Start from scratch

You can create a wildflower area from scratch on bare ground. Pick a low-nutrient patch of ground that hasn’t been cultivated recently; wildflower meadows establish best on unproductive soil. It’s worth checking what sort of soil you have and its pH before you choose which seeds to sow; wildflower seed merchants supply mixes suitable for various soil types and situations. For example, see the excellent advice here and here.

Soil fertility is also key and can also be tested in advance e.g. by NRN laboratories . A phosphorous Index of 0 or 1 is required to restore or create wildflower grassland. It is not advised to undertake wildflower grassland restoration or recreation if the index is higher than 3.

If your soil fertility is too high for perennial wildflowers to flourish, consider sowing a cornfield annual mix that includes plants like cornflower, corn poppy, corn marigold and corncockle, with some barley and wheat seed to add an authentic touch. If the phosphorous index is 2-3 there is the possibility of stripping soil nutrients through management that may create suitable conditions for restoration or creation, or the use of a reduced suite of wildflowers that may be able to compete with the grasses and nutrient-lowing flowers. However, you can also use yellow rattle and cut and collect to reduce fertility over a period of time (see below).

Top tips to create your patch from scratch:

  • The more ground preparation you can do, the better the results will be.
  • Control weeds by digging or rotovating, burying any vegetation to a depth of 15-20 cm (6-8 in). This also brings less fertile soil to the surface.
  • Meadows should not be sown on areas containing large numbers of strong perennial weeds such as docks, nettles or thistles. Sowing into bare ground is always best and it is essential to eliminate such weed species from the proposed meadow area prior to sowing.
  • Eradication is best undertaken when the weed species are in rapid, active growth by raking or pulling up by hand. April/May is the most effective time to do this.
  • If sowing into grass or an established meadow make sure the grass/meadow is as low as possible.
  • You can also dig out existing turf in a lawn/amenity grassland area to create a wildflower ‘bed’ – we have done this at our Victoria Hall office and it worked!
  • The most important principle in establishing a wildflower meadow is not to use manure or fertiliser. Wildflowers prefer low-nutrient soil; adding fertiliser can encourage grasses to grow vigorously, which then swamps the wildflowers.
  •  Firm and rake the surface to make a seedbed.
  • Sow in autumn, giving the seed time to settle in over winter. However, you can sow in spring and it is better if you are on heavy clay. Even large areas can be sown by hand quite easily.
  • Ensure that the seed is scattered evenly by sowing half lengthways and the remaining half widthways across the plot. Mixing the seed with silver sand makes the process easier. Rake in lightly and water thoroughly.
  • If you are concerned about vigorous grasses returning, or not being able to remove them in the first place, consider planting yellow rattle seed in August or September, available from reputable suppliers – we recommend Emorsgate or Naturescape. Yellow rattle is semi-parasitic and will reduce the growth of grass species found in most lawns/amenity grasslands, which allows finer grasses and herbs to flourish. It is also a lovely flower.

    Neil Wyatt

Maintaining your wild patch

It’s important not to miss out this last step. Keeping soil nutrient levels low is essential for a successful wildflower meadow. It could take 2-3 years for the meadow to properly establish.

An aesthetically pleasing meadow

Unmown meadows can be seen by some people as ‘unkempt’ grass, especially on public land or outside the peak flowering season. Here are a few ways to spread the “no mow” message:

• Regularly mow a thin strip along the edge (as you would a lawn), especially if by a footpath or car park. This helps give the impression that the site is being managed and is not just ‘waste ground’.
• Do what you can to ensure perennial weeds and grasses don’t proliferate.
• Ensure the meadow is cut annually at the end of the flowering season and remove clippings so the meadow looks neat all through autumn/winter.

Top tips for getting your wild patch right

  • Be careful when mowing – small mammals, amphibians and reptiles may be hiding in the grass. Some birds nest in larger meadows, so don’t mow until after the beginning of August.
  • Wildflowers are available in plug form and in ready-planted turf rolls, which can make establishing the plants even easier.
  • Sow a mix of wild grass and wild flower seed.

Suggested native wild flowers and grasses for Sheffield and Rotherham (n.b. Eastern Rotherham has a different underlying geology and so a limestone species list would be more appropriate instead)

  • Autumn hawkbit  Leontodon autumnalis
  • Bird’s-foot-trefoil  Lotus corniculatus
  • Black knapweed Centaurea nigra
  • Black medic Medicago lupulina
  • Bulbous Buttercup  Bulbous Buttercup
  • Chamomile  Chamaemelum nobile
  • Common Knapweed  Centaurea nigra
  • Common sorrel  Rumex acetosa (taller) or Sheep sorrel Rumex acetosella (shorter)
  • Common Spotted-orchid  Dactylorhiza fuchsii
  • Common toadflax Linaria vulgaris
  • Cornflower Centaurea cyanus
  • Corn marigold Chrysanthemum segetum
  • Cowslip  Primula veris
  • Cut leaved cranesbill Geranium dissectum
  • Daisy Bellis perennis
  • Field/common poppy – Papaver rhoeas
  • Field forget me not – Myosotis arvensis
  • Field Scabious  Knautia arvensis
  • Field woodrush  Luzula campestris
  • Germander speedwell  Veronica chamaedrys
  • Harebell  Campanula rotundifolia
  • Heath bedstraw  Galium saxatile
  • Lady’s bedstraw  Galium verum
  • Meadow buttercup  Ranunculus acris
  • Ox-eye Daisy  Leucanthemum vulgar
  • Red bartsia Odontites vernus
  • Red Clover Trifolium pratense
  • Ribwort plantain  Plantago lanceolata
  • Rough Hawkbit  Leontodon hispidus
  • Selfheal  Prunella vulgaris
  • Silverweed  Potentilla anserina
  • Scarlet Pimpernel Anagallis arvensis
  • Scentless mayweed Tripleurospermum inodorum
  • Southern marsh orchid Dactylorhiza praetermissa
  • White clover – Trifolium repens
  • Wild radish – Raphanus raphanistrum
  • Wild Thyme – Thymus polytrichus
  • Yarrow – Achillea millefolium
  • Yellow-rattle – Rhinanthus minor

Note:Yellow rattle and red bartsia need grasses to feed on – they can help repress dominant grasses, but we also suggest adding about 10% of fine-leaved grasses (for example the first few from this list) to your mix.

Grasses
Sweet vernal grass – Anthoxanthum odoratum
Common bent  – Agrostis stolonifera
Crested dog’s tail – Cynosurus cristatus
Smooth meadow grass  – Poa pratensis
Cock’s-foot – Dactylus glomerate
Sheep’s-fescue – Festuca ovina
Yorkshire-fog – Holcus lanatus
Annual meadow grass – Poa annua

Ground-cover species
Cut-leaved cranesbill – Geranium dissectum or Doves foot cranesbill  – Geranium molle
Creeping cinquefoil – Potentilla reptans

You may also find it helpful to visit our Wilder Green Spaces and Verges page here.

Get Involved

In This Section

  • Campaigning For Wildlife
  • Green and Blue Social Prescribing
  • Local community groups
  • Nature Adventures
  • Nature Friendly Gardening
  • Nature Recovery Rotherham
  • Nature Recovery Sheffield
  • Planning Issues
  • Planning Issues
  • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
  • Tree felling and wildlife protection
  • Volunteer with us
  • Wildlife Gardening
    • Help a hedgehog
    • How to attract bumblebees to your garden
    • How to attract butterflies to your garden
    • How to build a bat box
    • How to build a mini-pond
    • How to build a pond
    • How to build a pond
    • How to compost your waste
    • How to create a container garden for wildlife
    • How to create a hedgehog hole
    • How to encourage newts or other amphibians to your garden
    • How to feed birds in your garden
    • How to grow a wildlife-friendly garden
    • How to make a bee hotel
    • How to make a hedgehog house
    • How to make a log shelter
    • How to make a new build garden for wildlife
    • How to start a wildlife garden from scratch
    • How to grow a wild patch
    • Peat-free compost stockists near you

Contact Us

Call us: 0114 263 4335

Find us: Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust, 37 Stafford Road, Sheffield S2 2SF

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
    • Nature Reserves
      • Nature Recovery Sheffield
      • Nature Recovery Rotherham
      • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
    • Wildlife
      • Local Wildlife
      • Local Wildlife Rescue Centres
      • Reporting Wildlife Crime
    • About us
      • Who We Are
      • What We Do
      • Contact Us
      • Events & Activities
      • News
      • Work For Us
      • Wildscapes
      • The BNG Hub
    • Support Us
      • Become a Member
      • Corporate Support
      • Make a Donation
      • A Gift in Your Will
      • Kingfisher Magazine
    • Get Involved
      • Volunteer with us
      • Campaigning For Wildlife
      • Nature Recovery Sheffield
    • Online Shop
      • Online Shop Size Guides
      • Online Shop Delivery Information
      • Online Shop Terms, Delivery & Returns
  • © 2025 Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust
  • Registered in England Number 2287928. Registered Charity Number 700638.
  • Privacy Notice
  • Design By Ink & Water
Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}