Can a Summer Garden Become a Wildlife Service Station?
Can a Summer Garden Become a Wildlife Service Station? Your Garden May Be Busier Than You Think Your garden may look like a patch of grass to you, but to a tired bee in July it could be a motorway service station. There it is, wings slightly frayed, fuel running low, having fought its way across a landscape of patios, fences, driveways, mown lawns, artificial grass, decking, gravel and the occasional terrifying conservatory roof. Then suddenly it finds your lavender, your flowering thyme, your slightly untidy border, or that clump of clover you forgot to remove. To us, it may look like mild gardening failure. To wildlife, it may be the difference between carrying on and giving up. Summer gardens are not just decorative spaces. They are refuelling points, watering holes, cooling stations, nurseries, hunting grounds, hiding places and, occasionally, badger restaurants. If we start looking at our gardens through the eyes of wildlife, the whole place changes. The messy corner stops b...