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  • How to make a new build garden for wildlife

How to make a new build garden for wildlife

Use the blank canvas of your new build garden to make your new home a home for wildlife too!

© new-build-garden
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All the noise and disturbance involved in the construction of a house is likely to have frightened away any wildlife. It may be strangely quiet, no birdsong or insects buzzing, but with a bit of encouragement, your garden can become a popular destination for a wide range of visitors.

While new build gardens are typically bland and often void of plants, the advantage is that you have a blank canvas to work with. Improving the stony, thin, compacted soil requires some time and effort, but many wildflowers actually prefer poorer soils, so conditions are ideal for this kind of wildlife-friendly planting. Although it may take some time for other plants, shrubs and trees to get established, you can start from scratch and plan exactly what you would like to put in.

Try not to think of your garden in isolation, but as a jigsaw piece, slotting in next to many other green spaces to provide wildlife with a ‘corridor’ in which to move around freely. With this in mind, why not encourage your new build neighbours to follow your wildlife gardening lead?

Planning your wildlife-friendly garden

  • Provide shelter: Start by providing shelter, resting and nesting areas with a couple of silver birches and/or a selection of native shrubs, like holly or guelder rose. This will add height to your landscape and also provide much-needed shade for you in summer.
  • Use all the available space: Your garden is a three-dimensional space, so try to make use of all the available surfaces, including walls, fences and roofs. The most wildlife-friendly gardens are those full of plants, with little or no ground showing at all! Even your patio can be enhanced with containers of nectar-rich plants that will attract butterflies and bees.
  • Make a meadow: Your garden may well have a lawn which, if mown too frequently, will not support much wildlife. Consider replacing it completely in favour of more planting, and/or a pond. If you want to keep a grassed area, plant a small wildflower meadow that will play host to a multitude of butterflies, bees and other insects.
  • Dig a pond: However small your patch, there is always room for a pond. Even a small sink or tub pond, with a few aquatic plants, can make a great wildlife habitat. Ponds of all shapes and sizes benefit different communities of wildlife – water-loving insects dive beneath the surface, birds prey on amphibians, and small mammals come to drink.

Establishing your garden

  • Use wildlife-friendly pest control: The tender new shoots of your establishing plants might delight the local community of slugs and snails, but don’t be tempted to use pellets containing potentially harmful chemicals – there are plenty of alternative ways of controlling them, such as creating barriers or companion planting. Try to accept that they are an inevitable presence, however, as they do provide a delicious meal for frogs, toads, hedgehogs and birds.
  • Provide vertical planting: Fix wires and trellis on any appropriate vertical surface to support wildlife-friendly climbing plants, such as honeysuckle, jasmine and wisteria. Ivy and Virginia creeper can gallop up a wall or fence unaided and offer an excellent habitat and food source for many creatures.
  • Go native: Choose plants that are native to your area – a walk around the local countryside will provide inspiration.
  • Provide food and nesting sites: Provide feeding stations, water (in a birdbath or shallow bowl) and nest boxes to help birds and animals while your plants are establishing.

Maintaining your new garden

  • Don’t use fertiliser, wild flowers do best in poor soil.
  • To get the most out of your wildflower lawn, mow it short in late winter, lifting the clippings, and then leave the next mow until late summer after the flowers have all seeded.
  • A lawn that hasn’t been fed will benefit from an annual maintenance programme of scarifying and aerating. The RHS have some useful adviceon this.
  • A newly grassed area needs regular mowing in its first year to give it a chance to establish.
  • Don’t dismiss all weeds – a handful of nettles grown in a pot to stop them spreading, or tucked away in a corner, provide important food for butterflies.
  • If you decide to build a patio, leave some gaps in the pavers for extra planting opportunities.

Suggested plants:

  • Silver Birch – Betula pendula
  • Guelder Rose – Viburnum opulus
  • Common Hawthorn – Crataegus monogyna
  • Holly – Ilex aquifolium
  • Ivy – Hedera helix
  • Honeysuckle – Lonicera periclymenum
  • Jasmine – Jasminum officinale
  • Wisteria – Wisteria floribunda
  • Cotoneaster spp.
  • Firethorn – Pyracantha spp.
  • Japanese Quince – Chaenomeles speciosa
  • Hebe spp.
  • Skimmia – Skimmia japonica
  • English Lavender – Lavandula angustifolia
  • Common Sunflower – Helianthus annuus
  • Buddleia – Buddleja davidii
  • Common Knapweed – Centaurea nigra
  • Daisies, dandelions and thistles
  • Teasel – Dipsacus fullonum
  • Common Mallow – Malva sylvestris
Get Involved

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  • Nature Recovery Sheffield
  • Planning Issues
  • Planning Issues
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  • 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

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