Wildlife Gardening

Wildlife Gardening Services

 
Across the UK we look after more than two million acres of garden, and with the countryside under threat from human activities, every garden is a potential nature reserve. Individual gardens may be small, but together they form a patchwork, linking urban green spaces with the wider countryside and allowing wildlife to move about freely.
 
The range includes many kinds of flowers that have become a lot less common in the countryside. Giving them space in our gardens is a great way to help wildlife. They look good and also provide the perfect source of nectar for butterflies and bees.
 

Environmental Education Services

Need help in finding funding for building a wildlife garden or run educational sessions?

Need someone who can help run groups and provide materials giving a complete one to one service?

Need a maintenance service to help keep a wildlife garden in check?

Primroses, honeysuckle, lavender, violets, roses…these are among many people’s favorite flowers. They also happen to be the sort that butterflies, bees and moths love. Attracting wildlife into your garden is easy and endlessly rewarding. There are lots of small changes or choices you can make to increase the variety of creatures dropping by or staying to nest, rest or feed. So whether you have a shady, concrete back yard, a window box or a back garden the size of a football pitch there is always something you can do to bring it alive.

Environmental Education Services

Offering specialist wildlife products to the public at reasonable prices.

I love to help and educate people on how to make their local environments namely gardens more wildlife friendly.

I do sell a number of products on my stall that help people to do this ranging from bird food and homes to wildflowers. I also offer a loyalty card system for those regular shoppers on my stall and in return they get freebies!!! I can give you tips and tricks of the trade to encourage more visitors to your plot.

Save our pond lfe.............................

My pond is small and at times full of algae, with the water looking rather murky. Apart from fishing out excess algae, and occasional tending to the pond plants, my pond is left alone to do its thing. Sometimes the water clears, sometimes it's rather hard to see down past the first couple of inches. Whether it's looking clean or rather green, the frogs seem to like it. The pond has been used by frogs since it was first created, and is now home to large adult frogs, juvenile year-old frogs, froglets, and frogspawn and tadpoles in the springtime.

 
© 2007 copyright www.lady-bugs.co.uk wildlife gardening