Wednesday, October 12, 2011

All About Wildlife Gardening

Encouraging wildlife in your garden

It's very good when you see a porcupine crawl out from under the pile of notes, or bat a bat out of the house itself was built just after dark.

By encouraging wildlife into your garden does not create a sense of joy, but also continues to provide important habitat for wildlife. Here are some tips and ideas to keep the wild side of your garden.

Planting trees is the most obvious way to create a habitat for mammals and birds, by planting native tree species that provide food throughout the year for insects and birds. Tree shelters, depending on the size of the benefit of all beings, and often build their homes on or in trees.

Planting flowering shrubs, fruit and seeds at different times in recent years not only make your garden colorful and useful, but also provide insect treats.

Build a pool, right and no need to build one, but make one, if your garden is relatively small like me, you can always use an old receiver or shower if lucky enough to have people out there, put the pool while on the ground with his face bent to make it accessible to children in and out of wet bamboo bogginess frogs, lizards frogs and dragonflies. Add some small rocks around the pond for cover.

Bird and bat boxes are excellent for providing shelter and security, damage reached from the ground crawling predators. Place your computer at least 2 m above ground in a tree or wall and enjoy it.

Bats go where the food is to build a pond, planting a fence or planting night-scented flowers help attract bats to your garden.

Table birds become very popular with the birds during the winter when they are more difficult to find local food, local sunflower seeds, nuts or chopped fruit at the station to eat in your garden, it may take several days for the birds to take food, but when they know their food is taken with avidity.

If you have a space and then try to leave part of your garden to grow and not disturbed, put some notes in there, and let them rot, hedgehogs tend to see this environment as an ideal habitat for hibernation.

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