Tips for a Flower Garden That Attracts Wildlife
Flower gardening truly is an art. With each seasonal garden, you will come up with more ideas on how to enhance your backyard ecosystem. Many people enjoy reading about gardening tips on how to attract wildlife to their gardens. As a child, you may recall chasing yellow, orange and white butterflies, but perhaps you seldom see them anymore. Most of us remember our first glimpse of a tiny, delicate hummingbird or the first time a dragonfly touched our skin while we were floating on a raft at the lake. Certain plants are dynamos for luring these wonderful creatures to our back doorsteps. While you are free to incorporate whatever flowers you’d like into your garden, adding a few carefully chosen wildlife favorites will give you much more to gaze upon.
If you’re considering designing a garden that will attract song birds, then you can incorporate several special shrubs, annuals, perennials, cultivated and native foliage to entice them to your property. By growing plants from each category, you can offer seeds and fruit for every time of the year to keep the birds singing all year long. Make sure to provide a bird bath and toss seeds out in the winter to keep your bird clan happy.
In addition, think about the fact that, as well as your blooms, birds are fond of trees for nesting, protection and cover from the weather. Sometimes the trees even supply food like berries, sap and seeds. You can consider deciduous trees like hazelnut, American mountain ash, chestnut, dogwood, red mulberry, black walnut and sassafras, as well as evergreen trees such as American holly, red cedar, blue spruce, Douglas fir, white cedar, ponderosa pine and California juniper.
Flower gardening is an important source of food for sparrows, finches and other songbirds. You can try perennials like penstemon, tickseed, bee balm, goldenrod, cosmos, purple coneflower and four o’ clocks, or you may try annuals like sunflowers, asters, bachelor’s button, spider flower, snapdragons and cockscomb. Garden guides also recommend planting shrubs and vines where birds can hide from predators and seek out food. Some tasty plants (like cherries and raspberries) are preferable to our flying friends, but they’re picked clean in a hurry. On the other hand, birds can be seen feasting all year long on elderberries, blackberries, huckleberries, chokecherries, bayberries, Oregon grapes, beauty-berries, silver-berries, blueberries, crab apples, cranberries and currants all year long.
Naturally, flower gardening to attract both hummingbirds and butterflies is ideal. Gardening tips suggest incorporating bee balm, California fuschia, salvia, columbines, daisies, sunflowers, marigolds, zinnias, peas, clover, mint, milkweed, parsley, violets and pansiesthe to increase your odds of keeping these creatures nearby. Nature stores also sell very effective red and yellow hummingbird feeders that these little winged beauties just love. Since hummingbirds can be pretty territorial, you might want to set up more than one in different locations around the yard if you notice the birds are coming to your home.
Everyone wants their property to look its best and one of the ways to do that is to enhance your landscaping. For some great garden tips and suggestions on how to get the backyard of your dreams, check out more landscaping gardening ideas here.
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