How To Create A Wild Flower Garden

Have you ever wanted a wild flower garden? A wild flower garden is not just a garden that has turned wild, in fact it is quite the opposite. A garden that has gone wild usually looks a bit of a mess, whereas a wild flower has to have a closely controlled environment.

Garden flowers have been hardened, so to speak. They have been cultivated and cross-bred so that they can put up with not being taken care of all that well by the typical gardener who does not know a great deal about gardening, although there are some very fragile garden plants too. However, wild flowers have never had this treatment, they grow only where the circumstances are perfect or they do not grow at all. It is virtually impossible to grow wild flowers where they would not naturally occur.

This is why many people’s attempts at making a wild flower garden fail so miserably – they have expected the wild flowers to ‘just grow wild’ without having made the correct environment. Therefore, if you decide to create a wild flower garden, you will first have to determine what sort of flowers you want to grow.

Do you fancy meadow flowers, woodland flowers, hedgerow flowers, marsh or riverside flowers? You can amalgamate some of these styles, of course. You could merge meadow and hedgerow varieties, if you plant a hedge border around your garden.

Once you have chosen which types of flowers you would like to or can grow, you have to set about manufacturing the right environment. One of the nicest wild flower gardens, if your climate is right, is an orchid garden. In Thailand, many of the orchids grow on the bark of live or fallen trees, so we have a few uprooted tree stumps in sheltered areas of the garden with dozens of wild orchids growing on them.

The simplest wild flower garden for most people to create would be waterside, meadow and hedgerow combined. Therefore, first you will have to create a suitable pond and start growing wild hedges around your perimeters. Then plant a coarse grass on the rest of the soil. The pond can have a brick border, but at least one edge should be muddy – just wet mud leading into a shallow edge of the pond.

When these micro environments are ready, but not before, you can go out and forage for plants from similar environments to transplant into your wild flower garden. One note of caution here: please ensure that the flowers that you want to gather are not protected before you uproot them and never denude an area of a variety. If there are only one or two plants of a variety, do not take them.

Remember that your wild flowers are not that hardy, so you ought to have prepared their new home before you went foraging and you must replant them as soon as you get back. Try not to leave it until the next day.

It is preferable to collect flowers just after they have flowered and are commencing to die back. When you have discovered a flower that you want, carefully dig it up with a trowel and include a good sized lump of soil with its roots. You can put this into a plastic bag and put this in a basket. It is a good idea to take few photos of the flower in its original environment, so that you can do a bit of fine-tuning when you get back. It will also help you remember what that flower likes to live with when you go out collecting for your wild flower garden next time

Owen Jones, the writer of this article writes on a number of topics, but is at present concerned with exterior wall lighting. If you would like to know more or check out some great offers, please go to our website at Outdoor Wall Lamps.

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