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- elise's posts about: insects
elise's Blog
elise's posts about: insects
Apr 4, 2007 | 4:59 PM PST
Tags: dead , wood , tree , fallen , storm , woodpecker , pruning , logs , insects , birds
What to do with large pruned branches, old dead trees, and trees killed by snow and wind:
The key is to keep dead wood in your yard. It might no longer produce nice leaves or flowers or fruits, but dead wood makes a great hideout, nesting area, and food source for bugs, birds, and small mammals.
If you have a dead tree standing in your yard, and it's far enough from your house to not pose a risk for fire or falling on the house, the best thing to do is to leave it there. Bugs and grubs will seek it out and the tree will eventually become a natural woodpecker feeder. If the tree appears to have died from a disease, check with a local arborist to make sure the wood can't spread the disease to nearby living plants.
If you have large branches lopped of from a pruning project, find somewhere in your yard to place the branch(es) on the ground. Best practice is to partially submerge one end into soil to speed up the decomposition process while leaving the other end out in the air. Be wary of stacking many logs in a heap - this can be a danger to children playing and can also be a good home for rats. It's better to disperse the dead wood.
Large logs can be incorporated into landscaping features such as benches and steps while smaller branches can work well as plot dividers and path edging.
Trees knocked down by weather can be left in place or chopped up and spread throughout the yard, or consider leaving the trunk and removing the smaller branches which take up the most space.
Apr 4, 2007 | 4:19 PM PST
Tags: wildlife , garden , design , plan , vegetables , habitat , flowers , native , birds , animals , bugs , insects
Here are some ideas about how to make your garden the most rewarding place to be for yourself and for wildlife.
1. Think about how you typically walk to your house and what parts of your garden you spend time looking at every day, walking by and looking out your windows. These areas will become your visual focus areas. The rest of the yard can become devoted to fruits, vegetables, compost, and wildlife habitat.
2. Plant your visual focus areas with all your most beautiful plants and with plants that grow fruits you can pick as you pass by every day. Remember that even garden areas designed for visual appeal can be made beautiful using native plants that provide nectar, seed and fruit for wild birds and insects.
3. Section off more remote areas of your yard for dense, native-only plantings to give your critter friends a place to feel safe when they visit your garden.
4. Keep your veggies clustered together so the extra watering they require won't be wasted on other plants that don't need it.
5. Find a corner of your yard where you can pile all your pulled weeds and prunings for compost. This spot should be easily accessible but out of sight from your normal paths. If you live in a temperate climate you can mix your non-greasy food waste in with your yard compost and within a year the bottom of the pile will become fresh, nutritious compost to feed your flower beds. If you use this instead of store-bought fertilizers you will cut the risk of poisoning the wildlife you want to invite to your yard.
Tips: Before buying plants, research the native birds, mammals, and insects of your area. Find out what they like to eat and live in. Remember that birds often come to plants to eat the insects which are attracted to those plants.
