Photo: A Habitat
Fence made by Diyana
Do you want anything from the shop? I’m sure you’ve both said and heard that question
before. I was under the impression it
was a rhetorical question, but I’ve been advised that it can actually be a
genuine question for someone to buy something for you.
It’s usually a packet of crisps or a bar of chocolate and
not a three-page shopping list for the supermarket. Unless someone who was off
to the garden centre asked the same question. I have a brochure full of items I
like from there, starting with this year’s seed choice before delving into pergolas
and ponds.
I’ve started particularly early this year with seeds and
bought a couple of things online to kick start the season. They are not veggies yet, I have picked my
new ground cover plants for this year. I like to grow new varieties every year,
some are successful but others I don’t bother doing again. This year I have the
little-known plant Herniaria Glabra or rupturewort. It’s a practically indestructible
plant that will do well in dry chalky soil. I don’t think it will be a big
seller in my range of lawn substitute plants I have for sale, but I like it and
can live with it in my own garden and that’s the main thing.
Habitat Fencing
There are so many types of fencing. We love to either keep
things in or keep things out of our gardens. Fencing doesn’t always need to be
just a functional barrier though, you can have a habitat where wildlife,
insects and mammals can thrive.
Habitat fences are a simple method of laying out the waste
materials in the garden in an orderly manner between upright posts. You could
call them deadwood hedges. They don’t have to be used as a privacy fence, you
can put them anywhere in the garden as a feature or to hide the compost bins. It
could save you the hassle of going to the landfill site with garden waste too.
Deadwood fences aren’t new of course, people have been
making woven willow and hazel fences for ever. Habitat fencing uses the waste
materials from the garden so you don’t need to grow the materials especially for
the purpose.
Turn Waste into a Fence
There are no hard and fast rules for the fence. They can be started
by pushing in wooden posts up to around 30cm into the ground or until you think
they are sturdy enough. There’s no need to make them permanent as this gives you
the freedom to pull them up and relocate if needed. They can be around one
metre apart. When this is in place put all of your garden trimmings, sticks,
shrub prunings in layers horizontally and keep treading them down to a height
of around 80-100 cm. The fence width can be anywhere between 30-100 cm. Any
more than that and it might be a bit awkward to stack it up depending on how
long a reach you have. If things are looking a bit untidy you can tie the loose
pieces in with some hemp twine.
The last layers of shrubs and branches can be added quite
loosely so that the interested birds can also build a nest in the shrubbery.
The denser areas underneath will be a home to loads of smaller creatures who
need shelter at all times of the year. It could also help as a wind barrier for
areas in the garden where you have taller perennials
The shrub and branch prunings in the garden can now be
applied to this hedge again and again (check there are no birds nesting first) The
fence will settle and decay from the base so it can be topped up indefinably. You
might even be left with some lovely compost at the base to grow some climbers in.
A Tidier Option
If you like things a bit tidier and you don’t have a lot of
woody waste in your garden, there’s a great design made from fencing wire you
can use. It’s made from fence panels again but has the wire running both sides
of the posts. The idea is very much like the gabion baskets filled with stones,
but instead of stones you can fill the gap with leave, small twigs and even your
kitchen waste. I’ll call it the compost fence. You heard it here first.