Designing Your Wildlife Garden
Reclaiming wildlife habitat yard by yard is a vital step anyone can take just outside their door. Re-establishing native plant communities and protecting the local watershed with sustainable gardening practices is what gardening for wildlife is all about.
Here are some simple ways you can provide the essential habitat components of food, water, cover, and places to raise young while designing a garden space that appeals to your aesthetics and enhances the natural landscape.
Decide on the type of habitat garden based on your region.
There many options, such as bird-, bee-, and butterfly-friendly gardens, rain gardens and water gardens, meadow or prairie gardens, etc. Existing trees and plantings in your yard may help dictate what native plants will do well.
Observe the amount of sun and shade your intended garden habitat receives during the day. For example, any area that gets six or more hours of sunlight will thrive with sun-loving plants. Areas that tend to collect water or stay moist will be suitable for more wetland plants.
Prepare your site for planting.
Clear new planting site of all turf grass and weeds, unless your soil is too compacted to plant in—natives do not need much soil amendment. In fact, soil that is too rich and loamy results in very tall plants that can flop over.
Decide on a focal point for each garden bed or section of your yard.
These can be natural, like an anchoring shrub, tree, or hollow log. Human touches, like a birdbath, fountain, bench, or sculpture can add interest and draw people in to the landscape.
Balance the “natural look” with some definition.
Well-designed borders, paths, hedges, plant islands, and fencing frame the features of the garden and provide a neat appearance that your neighbors will appreciate.
Select plants that provide year-round diversity.
Wildlife need food, water, cover, and places to raise young with flowers, shrubs, trees, and grasses all year. To understand the benefits of these read about Plant for Diversity, then explore the types of plants and wildlife native to your area by entering your zip code in the Native Plant Finder.
Plant similar species of plants in groupings.
You will get larger color and textural impact, and eye-catching patterns throughout the garden bed or landscape. This technique also draws the eye into the garden and the close plantings will prevent weed groups and minimize the need for excess mulching.
Provide a backdrop of texture and structure.
Evergreens, native grasses, or taller plants will help frame smaller plants.
Sustain your wildlife garden and the ecosystem with Sustainable Practices.
Maintaining your landscape in a sustainable,
environmentally-friendly way ensures that the soil, air, and water that native wildlife (and people) rely upon stay clean and healthy.
Practice neighbor-friendly gardening.
Explain to your neighbors the intent and design of your garden and yard that may not conform to common garden or neighborhood association expectations.
Celebrate by certifying and displaying a sign!
Show why you have designed your yard intentionally to help wildlife and encourage them to do the same.
https://www.nwf.org/Garden-for-Wildlife/Create/At-Home
This is a neat theme and one I am fully in to. When we bought this house 10 years ago, it had so many mature trees and a ravine with a small creek in the way back. I learned that I could register it as a Certified Wildlife Habitat, which I’ve done. We have a beautiful little sign that marks it.
We live in a semi rural neighborhood, so it looks like any suburban neighborhood from the front, but the backyard is very full of animal life. We see deer, raccoons, possums, skunks, groundhogs, foxes, and bunnies on a pretty regular basis, all from the family room and sunroom that face the wooded backyard. What a treat!
So the natural habitat is the type of gardening I do the most of. I love native wildflowers, and there’s a lot to learn about those. Some of them are very very pretty.
Getting rid of invasives is also a good idea. It takes a lot of work, but it well worth it.
Then it’s easier to replace with native plants.
Having goats prevents most of that. For now, they’re keeping the wild at bay which is a good thing. I will be getting rid of them at some point though.