janestarz: (Default)
[personal profile] janestarz
Combine a mother who drags most of the unwanted plants from your garden with an inspirational piece from Ursula Vernon (who has been slowly seeping my brain in a mixture of mulch, sunshine and rain, which will make anything grow!) and you'll find I've been bitten by the gardening bug. Again.

Now, my balcony has been neglected since June, at which time the stress for Drachenfest mostly prevented me from paying attention to the herbs and after Drachenfest the way to the balcony was blocked by big boxes full of arrows. I claim ... er... generic busy-ness as an excuse.

And by the way, my timing sucks because by the time I'll actually have time to pay attention to my garden it'll be November, which is off-season for gardening and an excellent time to start planning the spring re-vamping of the garden. But I'm buzzing with the bug now, so why not try and get my act together now.

What I want is to clear away the gunk of previous gardens (a pile of thorny hell that's obscuring the red rose I posted pictures from earlier this week) and have a bird-friendly, and thus a bug friendly garden. How I'd love to have caterpillars and beetles and snails skittering around in my garden, because that means that a) I have a healthy garden and b) the kittehs will have something to glare at and c) it will attract birds.

Bee-balm is the magic word Ursula used but bee-balm is also called bergamot and this is a native to North-America. Which is fine if you're on the other side of the pond, but might not be to handy around here. It's probably a common problem most people ignore when they're at gardening centers, but it's important to me that what I have in my garden is native, non-invasive, well-behaving and good for bees.

Lucky for me, my Google-fu prevailed, and googling for "inheemse tuinplanten nederland bijen" (because if I'd have translated it to English, it would probably have less results) handed me a database of native plants, that can be sorted by name (Dutch, Frisian, scientific), region, flowering months, lifetime, flowering colour and biosphere. Sadly, it doesn't have a bee-ootiful tast-o-meter to tell me exactly how it tastes to bees, but I have connections in the family that can help there.
As for helping them have a habitable place to live, Nesthulp.nl has some lovely images, movies and tips (also which plants will help).

As for butterflies, a buddleja will be sufficient, but I think the huge hydrangea that's already there will not go amiss either.

Now, why am I so bouncy about this garden all of a sudden?

EDIT: Now, if I cross-reference the native plants database with the plants that attract bees as well as the common kitchen herb list and a list of plants I can dye with, I'll be getting somewhere real quick.

Date: 2011-08-23 07:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anemoona.livejournal.com
You should try vivara.nl They have lots of plants that are bird and bee friendly. I won't advise to buy the plants there, they are extremely expensive. You can find them much cheeper in a local gardening shop (tuincentrum).

Date: 2011-08-23 08:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] janestarz.livejournal.com
Goeie tip!

Date: 2011-08-23 09:20 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kenshinichinyo.livejournal.com
Nog een tip uit de praktijk: bijen, hommels en zweefvliegen worden heel erg blij van bloeiende kruiden, maakt niet uit welke - dan heb je wat voor in de huisapotheek en in de keuken, en je bewijst de bijtjes een dienst (de violette bloem-aartjes van hysop zijn heel erg mooi, bdw). Ook aanbeveling waard is de dropplant: een vaste plant die ca. 1 m hoog wordt, zo'n beetje heel de zomerlang bloeit met mooie lichtpaarse aren, en echt superfavoriet is bij de hiervoor genoemde 3 insectengroepen.

Date: 2011-08-23 12:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] janestarz.livejournal.com
Goeie tips! Thanks!

Date: 2011-08-23 07:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] querca-robur.livejournal.com
Wat goed dat je hier aan denkt! Ik word altijd heel gelukkig van mensen die dat uit zichzelf bedenken ^.^ Vivara is zeker een goeie tip, ze hebben ook allerlei hele gave kasten, bvb voor solitaire bijtjes enzo (die steken trouwens niet).

Date: 2011-08-24 07:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] janestarz.livejournal.com
Ik lees Ursula's blog (inclusief rants over haar beestjes, hoe cool het was dat ze nu meer dan een miljoen kikkerdrileitjes in haar vijver heeft, welke soorten hert-bestendig zijn en ook over haar kunst) nu al een paar jaar en het bevalt geweldig. Ze is nogal bewust bezig met permacultuur, mulchen, soortenbehoud en het maken van een geweldige wilde tuin met tig inheemse soorten.

She kind of rubs off on me. En ze kan ook heel goed schrijven. Ik leen je Nurk wel eens. (Kijk hier: [livejournal.com profile] ursulav)

Profile

janestarz: (Default)
janestarz

April 2026

S M T W T F S
    1234
5 678 910 11
12 1314 15 161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 18th, 2026 04:35 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios