Ottawa Citizen

THE WORLD OF POLLINATOR­S

How you can play a bigger role

- MARK CULLEN Mark Cullen is an expert gardener, author and broadcaste­r. Get his free monthly newsletter at markcullen. com. Look for his new book, The New Canadian Garden, published by Dundurn Press. Follow him on Twitter @MarkCullen­4 and Facebook.

There is much that you can do in your yard and garden that impacts on the beneficial wildlife in your community. Here are a few ideas that might spark your interest and your desire to play a bigger role in the world of pollinator­s that exists outside your back door. Plant a hedge: A fence is fine for creating privacy in your yard. However, a permanent hedge can provide so much more, while offering privacy and quiet (in fact, it absorbs noise more effectivel­y than a fence). A hedge is often home to birds nesting and having babies, shelter for insects and small creatures that are part of the natural web.

I prefer native white cedar as a hedge in a sunny position for fast growth and a permanent vertical delineator between neighbours. Other great hedging plants include the classic deciduous privet (up to two metres high), boxwood (up to a metre high) and alpine currant (two metres high, great for the shade). For an informal approach to the project, plant virtually any flowering shrub that you like. Lift a slab: Do you have a flagstone, interlocki­ng or patio-slab walkway or patio? Consider lifting some random pieces out of the puzzle and filling it in with low-growing, ground-hugging plants that attract pollinator­s while in bloom and provide safety for small, ground-dwelling insects. Look for creeping thyme (Thymus serpyllum) for a great show of colour early in summer, Irish or Scotch moss or any number of low-growing sedums and sempervivu­ms. All bloom at one point in the season and tolerate a moderate amount of foot traffic. They cool down an otherwise hot area in the yard too. Cut and come again: This weekend I will cut my veronica (about 50 of them) in half. They bloomed in July and now are ready to bloom again, but only if I take the time to remove the first flush of flowers. The same is true for many early summer flowering perennials, including Sweet William, Echinops (globe thistles), lavender and delphinium­s. While the second coming of bloom is generally not as dramatic as the first, it is worth the effort. Pollinator­s will thank you for it. Many annual flowering plants enjoy a mid-season trim as well. Petunias respond with an abundance of late season blooms when you cut about onethird of their growth off now. Deadhead your geraniums and marigolds to encourage more bloom. Pinch the main flower out of Butterfly bush after it has bloomed to encourage more lateral blossoms late in August and September. Plant a vine: The fences and walls around your property come alive when you plant a vine up them. I can’t imagine anything more beautiful than a clematis and climbing rose planted together against a fence or on a trellis, secured to the garage wall. Or a flowering hydrangea clinging to shaded support. Birds nest in vines and enjoy the fruits of many plants, like pyracantha (firethorn), native Virginia Creeper and even grapes. Leave it standing: Ornamental grasses, rudbeckia, Echinacea (purple coneflower), monarda ( bee balm) and Shasta Daisy all produce a seed head, once they finish blooming, that attracts foraging song birds. Don’t cut them down. The flocks of yellow finches that invade my garden from now through winter are testament to this. Come autumn, resist the temptation to sanitize your garden and let these perennials stand.

Speaking of autumn, far off as it seems now, one of the best choices you can make when considerin­g beneficial wildlife in your yard is leaving the fallen leaves in it.

Rake leaves off your lawn, as they can do damage there. Moving them under hedges, onto perennial beds and even the veggie garden, where they will rot down before the next growing season, adding much-needed organic raw material to the soil and habitat for ground-dwelling insects.

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 ??  ?? Vines and climbing roses on walls and fences offer may benefits to wildlife and insects in and around the property.
Vines and climbing roses on walls and fences offer may benefits to wildlife and insects in and around the property.
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