With the help of a little Dobbies know-how, transform your garden into a bright and beautiful eco friendly haven and attract wildlife.
The types of flowers and plants you grow and wildlife you attract can make a huge difference to the environment, not to mention the lushness and charm of your garden.
There are creative ways of achieving an eco friendly garden from using organic pesticides and ethically sourced wood and gravel to creating ponds and planting oxygenating plants.
Wildlife attracting plants
Creating wildlife hubs such as garden ponds, rockeries or wild grass banks are stylish ways of attracting visitors such as frogs, bees, birds and butterflies. Choosing the right plants will help your mini eco system flourish; native plants thrive without too much care and attention and attract an abundance of bugs and creatures.
We’ve listed our favourite native plants and wild flowers and their individual qualities that will help spring life into your garden:
Wild thyme
This is a fragrant native plant perfect for a rockery, herb garden or even it a pot on the window sill. It has pink- purple flowers that attract bees and butterflies and you can also use it for cooking.
Startwort
Startwort will grow deep in your pond. Not only does it provide good protection for pond creatures such as fish but it also has attractive floating leaves and is oxygenating so will help keep your pond healthy and clear.
Bluebells and Snowdrops
These dainty little flowers are a welcome sign of spring and perfect for wild grassy banks or shaded areas; if you’re after a country-side meadow feel to your garden then these little flowers create the look. They leave a sweet floral scent wherever you open the back door and also provide a food source well before other flowers start to show signs of life.
Ivy
Ivy has a timeless charm about it. It grows wildly but you can coach it to climb the back wall in any pattern you choose using supporting wires. Ivy provides protective shelter for birds; which you’ll certainly notice as they chirp away merrily.
Organic care
What you use to care for your garden can have a big impact on its health. Artificial fertilisers and feeds force plants to grow and chemicals can kill the organisms in the soil that healthy plants need. Natural plant feeds and fertilises are made from organic plant extract and so rather than artificially making plants grow, they subsidise the naturally occurring nutrients, amino acids, plant hormones, vitamins, minerals and micronutrients in the soil.
There are also some old tricks and simple ingredients you can use to care for your garden naturally and keep weeds away:
- Vinegar or lemon juice are effective natural weed killers.
- Pour boiling water over your weeds, but make sure you keep the carnage away from healthy plants.
- Seaweed or organic seaweed extract helps your plants grow strong and resistant to disease and pests.
- Varying your planting and what you grow around the garden rather than grouping types together is also a natural way of controlling pests.
Wildlife care and providing shelter and food
What you plant and put in your garden provides food and shelter for all sorts of wildlife and helps bring together the natural order of things. In order to encourage shy creatures though you’ll probably need to give them a little encouragement.
Foxes, badgers, bats, squirrels and birds such as woodpeckers, finches and warblers are a healthy sight and all of them will quite easily be enticed. So, to build a wildlife sanctuary, here are some tips:
- A fresh water supply can be even more effective at attracting birds into your garden than bird feeds so make sure you provide a garden bird bath. A pedestal bird bath also doubles up as a decorative garden feature; drop colourful petals in to help attract birds.
- Place a bird box or nest box high on a tree under leaves and branches; this will encourage breeding birds to nest.
- Create a ‘bird bistro’ with a roofed hanging bird table, made with FSC certified timber.
- Bees, ladybirds, lacewings and butterflies are a welcome and vital part of any organic garden. A single lacewing larva can eat between 1000 and 10,000 aphids in its lifetime so rather than use greenfly repellent, invest in a lacewing chamber or lacewing house; providing a safe dry place for them to spend the winter.
- A hanging box with cavities will provide shelter for bees. Butterfly towers or hibernation towers placed near scented flowers will attract the declining butterfly population.
- Use a bat box to provide a roosting spot for bats in the summer. Place the bat box as high up as possible, preferably on a tree or close to a wooded area away from people (and cats).
- Hedgehogs look for a safe place to hibernate in winter so place a hedgehog house in a quiet sheltered part of your garden. If a female hedgehog chooses to make it her winter home you could have baby hedgehogs in spring who will make a feast of pests such as slugs and snails.
- Make sure all your bird boxes, bat boxes and hedgehog and insect houses are all made from untreated and FSC certified wood. The FSC logo identifies products which contain wood from responsibly managed forests, independently certified in accordance with the rules of the Forest Stewardship Council A.C.
FSC Certified Furniture
With global wood consumption predicted to increase 50% by 2050, the type of wooden furniture and wooden garden products you buy can have a big impact on helping to save the world’s forests. Supporting sustainable forestry can ease the pressure on our forests and is another step towards an eco friendly garden and home.
When you buy wooden furniture from Dobbies, you’ll see the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) mark on our products. This means your furniture is:
- Ethically sourced
- Environmentally friendly
- Economically responsible
- Socially responsible
What does FSC certified mean?
The Forestry Stewardship Council (FSC) is an independent organisation which promotes the responsible growth and sustainability of the world’s forests.
If you buy indoor or outdoor wooden furniture with the FSC label, you can be assured that it has been independently tested to make sure it comes from forests that meet the social, economic and ecological needs of present and future generations.
Dobbies fully support the Forestry Stewardship Council and the great work they do to help lower our planet’s carbon emissions and improve the health and economies of the developing countries that supply the raw materials.
We have the FSC mark on our wooden furniture products because we believe in providing value for our customers and in creating a sustainable relationship with our suppliers and their families. And all of this leads to a greener planet!








{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }
Hi, what flowers do you sell that are good for bees that I can plant in spring and will flower through the summer? Thanks.
Clare
Hello Clare,
Single dahlias are a hit with bees, doubles are often ignored.
The single-flowered roses, including crab apple and hawthorn prove really popular as well.
Foxgloves, snapdragons, heathers and other tubular flowers are also great bee treats.