Big Garden Birdwatch Is Back!
This weekend, why not join more than half a million people from across the UK and take part in the world’s largest wildlife survey?
This weekend, why not join more than half a million people from across the UK and take part in the world’s largest wildlife survey?
As well as encouraging you to support The Big Garden Birdwatch, we’d like to find out what your favourite garden bird is.
We’re asking you to vote for your favourite from the top ten birds that were spotted in UK gardens in 2015. Just visit our Facebook page to cast your vote and you will be automatically entered into the draw to win this beautiful metal sculpture from our friends at Kew Gardens.
Although we’ve had one of the mildest winters, more cold weather is predicted. So, why not head indoors or to the greenhouse and get started sowing seeds now to create a mass of colour in the summer?
We trickled a pebbly stream into a formal slate-faced, stepped water feature to connect our client’s garden to the local environment and give plenty of space for growing vegetables and entertaining friends.
Following on from my earlier blogs on wildlife gardens and ponds you’ll have guessed by now that, allied to my professional interest in gardens and all things horticultural, is a fascination for wildlife and, in particular birds.
Last month we were waxing lyrical about Autumn leaves. But for most of us leaves are great while they are still on the trees, but once they fall, they lose their attraction. They can clog up ponds, kill your lawn, encourage slugs and generally make your garden look a mess. So this month’s top tips are all about leaves and what you can do to make leaves your friends:
“What would you like to get out of your garden?” This is the first question we ask our customers and over the last twenty or so years of designing and creating gardens, the answers have been many and varied. Most, however, tend to include the same overall themes; seating areas, lawns, colourful and interesting planting, space for the kids to play etc. Them come the ‘nice to haves’; water somewhere would be nice, lighting, irrigation (we never have time to water). Almost all say ‘low maintenance’ – no one has ever asked us for a ‘high maintenance’ garden!
Autumn leaves can be very evocative and one of the most dramatic signs of the changing season. But by the time they come, many of the jobs you need to think about to prepare your garden for the cooler months, should already have been started.
To save you having to worry about what you need to be doing in your garden during the Autumn and Winter so that it is ready to burst into life again in the Spring, we’ve put together an Annual Garden Care and Development Programme.
A visit to the beautiful grounds of Howbery Park last week to interview candidates for our new team (more on this later) prompted me to highlight what I feel are the most important features of our landscape – trees. I think they’re brilliant.
Rather than bombard you with lots of jobs to do in the garden during August, we’d much rather you sit back and enjoy it.
While you do, why not capture your garden at its best and share your photos with us and your fellow GreenArt customers and friends?