Make your garden wildlife friendly | Gardening for Wildlife | Gardening Australia

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ธ.ค. 2020
  • When Yolanda Van Rooyen bought a house that backed onto bushland, she wanted to create a garden that would extend the wildlife habitat.
    There are some basic ingredients that make a garden wildlife friendly and Tino tours Yolanda’s garden to check them out.
    Getting rid of the weeds and reducing the lawn
    Yolanda notes: “I spent the first couple of years getting rid of weedy exotics like cotoneaster and a lot of lawn, which doesn’t provide much habitat.”
    Birds might love the shiny red fruit of Cotoneaster (Cotoneaster glaucophyllus), but it is an environmental weed that is often spread into the bush by birds dropping its seed.
    You don’t have to get rid of all the lawn! Planting dense shrubbery adjacent to the lawn will provide space where birds and other animals can hide in safely.
    Go for local
    Choose local species where possible. Local plants will flower and fruit at times that are predictable for native species and will help maintain local gene pools.
    She has used a lot of indigenous species that are endemic to the area; some are only found in Tasmania. Some are chewed on by visiting local animals, which Yolanda says, ‘can be frustrating but it’s what it’s all about’.
    It’s good to avoid lots of showy native cultivars such as hybrid grevilleas and callistemons, which favour aggressive birds, like New Holland Honeyeaters and wattlebirds, that chase away smaller birds.
    Plant a variety of habitats
    Plant a variety of layers - think of ground layers, understorey shrubs, mid-storey shrubs and trees, and canopy trees.
    Yolanda has more than 90 plant varieties in her garden, with different textures, size and shape, which provides a range of habitats.
    Logs and rocks are also important sunbathing sites for reptiles and are great fungi habitat.
    Yolanda has converted an old bath into a pond* planted with native vegetation, which offers a home to frogs, birds, dragonflies and other insects.
    Plant things you love!
    Your wildlife friendly garden has to be something you love!For Yolanda, her garden is all about bringing her favourite parts of Tasmania’s wilderness right to her backyard, as well as providing a place for her two children to play.
    Don’t be too tidy
    A tidy garden isn’t great for wildlife. Leaf little provides habitat for skinks and feeds fungi, which in turn feeds a huge number of insects, then many birds, marsupials and lizards eat the insects. By tidying up you are not only disturbing this cycle, but you are preventing the nutrients released from the breakdown of garden material to go back into your garden.
    *Remember to check with your council regarding local laws on fencing requirements for any pond, pool or water feature you have in your yard.
    FEATURED PLANTS
    Barber’s gum (Eucalyptus barberi)
    Heart-leafed silver gum (Eucalyptus cordata)
    Southern grevillea (Grevillea australis)
    Beaked hakea (Hakea epiglottis)
    Bushman’s bootlace (Pimelea nivea)
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ความคิดเห็น • 15

  • @ReleaseThePeace
    @ReleaseThePeace 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Need more episodes like this

  • @JohnS916
    @JohnS916 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Great video. It was both informative and peaceful. We need more people like Yolanda here in the States. I've always had a soft heart for wildlife. On the one hand, I retired as a police officer and I think that experience, spanning many years motivated me to appreciate wildlife more. It was my way of balancing out the bad with the good, sort of a Ying and Yang scenario. At this time I live in a typical tract home neighborhood, but one fairly close to some riparian areas like ponds and fields. Some of the wildlife that is attracted to this primary source of food undoubtedly overflows into the neighborhoods surrounding it. At this time I have made friends with an Opossum and being me, I set out food for him/her, just a small amount so he doesn't rely on us as his primary food source. My daughter and I get a kick out of seeing him wander into the yard at night and munch down on what we left out. He also enjoys the seed droppings from our bird feeder and that actually helps with maintenance around the feeder, I no longer have to pull seeds that have sprouted around the feeder. He's gotten used to us shining a light on him as he feeds, not so with a younger Opossum that started showing up some time ago. As soon as we shined the light on him/her, he took off. He is very small and I think the larger adult started beating him to the "snack pile" by showing up earlier and that is probably why we haven't seen the juvenile for awhile now. There is also the unfortunate chance he fell prey to a predator. It's been sort of a sideshow during the COVID period, something we take very seriously.
    Anyway, thank you Gardening Australia for introducing the idea of making my backyard more wildlife-friendly, even when I'm confined to a typical tract home lot there is a lot that can be done to help out our wildlife friends.

  • @VanajaManiKitchen
    @VanajaManiKitchen 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Gardening superb

  • @wwfarmhouse9055
    @wwfarmhouse9055 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great Story. Thanks.

  • @johnosandra4151
    @johnosandra4151 ปีที่แล้ว

    I found this peaceful, unlike my 8-week program which I developed after 10 years of fighting in the Octagon!!!

  • @alanshrimpton6787
    @alanshrimpton6787 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I have bananas in Auckland NZ and when I leave a few bananas on to over ripen the wax eyes enjoy them and tuis love the flowers. Far from native but very enjoyable.

  • @raahi2531
    @raahi2531 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Amazing! I am corporations indigenous plants of my area in my garden and have seen, lizards, birds butterflies and insects benefit

  • @AAHomeGardening
    @AAHomeGardening 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    So beautiful

  • @NewMindGarden
    @NewMindGarden 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Wow.. Great sharing.. Absolutely amazing 🌸🌿

  • @zalehaburude7752
    @zalehaburude7752 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Truly wonderful....

  • @RobinLewisMakes
    @RobinLewisMakes 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great episode

  • @jamshidnikkerdar2074
    @jamshidnikkerdar2074 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great 👍

  • @jeanne5376
    @jeanne5376 ปีที่แล้ว

    Obrigada! MUITO OBRIGADA!

  • @timehealthfit1891
    @timehealthfit1891 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    You're all that and a super-size bag of chips, want to be youtube friends?