Eco Adventures: Create Your Own Backyard Habitat

Posted by Catherine - Under: Community, Eco Basics, Eco Friendly Garden, Environment, General, Home Improvements, How Did You Do?, Planning, Shows & Events, Spring, Summer, Wildlife, Winter

There are no excuses at all for not creating a haven for wildlife where you live – even if you are high rise!

Every spare flower can help species to feed and survive – as you are helping to create ‘wildlife corridors’ between parks and gardens along the way. Helping our wildlife to get around and multiply!

And by creating this safe haven – you could actually get a certificate to prove you are playing your part in helping garden wildlife.

How To Get Involved:
Ideally you will find a way to feed, water and protect any birds, reptiles or mammals that you can as well as offering then a place to raise their young – depending on your circumstances.

Not everyone needs to find a home for brown bears or wetland birds – even a tiny home for a sparrow or overwintering butterflies can be a perfect wildlife ‘garden’.

Obviously – the more land you have – the more you can offer to help; but every live creature needs a home – and you can offer that wherever you live.

I have feeders hanging outside my apartment window where I regularly see blue tits, great tits, sparrows and squirrels, as well as collared doves and wood pidgeons on the ground eating the fallen crumbs – I’ve even had sparrowhawks here because of this – but they weren’t here for the peanuts!

Visit Garden for Wildlife with Scotts to get some great information to help you get started – as well as information on native plants that will encourage and benefit local species to your garden, yard or window box!

Get Certified!
Scotts are hoping to get 150,000 wildlife habitats created in a massive drive to improve the choices that animals have to move around our urban areas and open spaces.

There are so many roads and buildings in some places that wildlife just can’t get established, Also migrating animals find it hard to pass through some areas due to the lack of essential foods or safe places to rest or sleep.

So why not find out how you could create a feeding station for migrating insects and birds; or how you could create a breeding pond for amphibians; a winter sleepover for cold mammals; or a one night stop-over spot for a wandering anything!

Even if you can only offer 1 of the required actions – you can still apply and recieve great tips about progressing on to full certification – as well as a free magazine subscription!

Or – why not work with a friend who has more space to get certified together – maybe even your whole class – or school!

The more people and places that get involved – the better the results will be in your town and in your state – as well as the whole country.

Animals don’t always just live in one place the whole year – they travel. So if people in the place where these animals live in the summer, people in the places they pass through and people in the place where they spend winter all put in a little effort – we can start to make a real difference.

Join In:

Get Your Kids Inspired By The Natural World

Posted by Catherine - Under: Eco Friendly Garden, Environment, Fall/Autumn, Summer, Wildlife

Give your kids the chance to become involved in their future.

I know this blog is mainly about your home – there is no reason to think that the outside world isn’t connected to that. You chose your home for it’s location and everything that came with it – but you don’t want to just live in your house for ever.

You want to go out to the local parks and woods, even travel further to other regional areas and zoos – maybe even to the other side of the world to see wildlife and natural landscapes that are unique. And that’s where the biodiversity comes in.

Without this variety, there would be no beauty in the world. Imagine if all animals were either cows or dogs, or only brown or white in color. Imagine if zoos and nature reserves only had squirrels and rabbits in them! It would be awful – and it would not inspire kids to explore the world around them.

The world needs the kids out there discovering things for themselves – as this is how things happen and changes are made. If young people don’t become involved in their surroundings and the amazing variety of wildlife and plants that it supports – then they cannot have a say in their own future or that of their own children down the line.

This Is Biodiversity.
The way that animals and plants interact to survive keeps the status quo. The classic example of ‘the plants feed the herbivores and the herbivores become food for the carnivores’ follows the basic principles but it is not a chain so to speak – it’s a web.

So add to the above that insects are needed to pollinate the plants – but they in turn need other plants for their young to live off and those plants might need to be in a certain location to thrive. They may also (in the case of bees) need to nest in tunnels dug by mice or voles which survive by eating certain other plants and insects.

The list of connections goes on and on through animals and plants of all shapes and sizes – and they all have their part to play in the natural world that we see every day. Everything has changed it’s appearance or shape of needs to fit into a gap in the web so it can survive.

The Competition:
So, why not help your kids to get active and try to capture these connections and these differences with a great photo.

You don’t even have to travel anywhere to get involved as your garden could be home to mini-beasts of amazing colors, butterflies feeding on your plants, birds looking for an easy meal and even small mammals creeping around your garden furniture.

Of course, the further afield you travel the more variety you can find. Bold patterns and bright colors are found in the tropics and larger mammals need a lot of space to thrive – but a simple brown bird can steal the show if it has a specialisation – something about it that makes it different from other birds – like really long legs or a really long beak.

Take a look at the short video on their website to get the finer details - and to find some photo-taking tips – and to see some inspiring shots that have already been added. Your entry could mean that your image is spread across the globe as the best of them all. Not only winning the first prize – but also inspiring the next generation of wildlife protectors.

Something our world is in great need of.


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