The Garden Year: June 2025

For this year’s Garden Year linky I’m continuing to share advice from Songbird Survival about how we can make our gardens the best they can be for birds.

This past month I’ve really been enjoying working, or more accurately pottering, in my garden - though earlier in the month I had a scare when I thought I’d lost a couple of my potted roses and the astrantia, but thankfully moving them to a more sheltered spot and giving them a more regular water has helped them through. One of the roses has even flowered - yay! The other has recovered so much that it’s grown new leaves to replace those it dropped.

My hardy fuchsias were looking very twig-like and so once I thought the frosts had passed I braved it and cut all the dead wood out, but being careful to leave enough of the sticks to support the new growth which up until now had relied on them. It seems to have worked so far…

#ThinkBirds

Songbird Survival suggest that we should aim to include five essentials in our gardens for a wildlife-friendly space, they are:

  1. Shelter - this is important for birds and small mammals to escape predators; trees, hedges and shrubs all provide places they can hide.

  2. Food - an assortment of flowers and vegetation will attract insects and berry bushes or fruit trees also provide a great source of food.

  3. Nesting - nest boxes are a great way to provide safe nesting environments for birds, but also think about planting long grasses or cardoons which supply birds with good nesting materials.

  4. Water - provide a space, such a s a shallow bird bath, which is cleaned regularly.

  5. Be natural - ditching the pesticides will help wildlife thrive!

Advice, inspiration and places to visit

Leave a link below to share what you’ve been up to in the last month, or add a comment sharing your plans for the upcoming month.

“TheGardenYear

The Barbican's Community Garden

On a sunny day in April I was down in London with some time on my hands and so I had a wander, and found myself coming out of yet another undiscovered part of the Barbican. I’m sure every time I go I find another way in or out, and so I wasn’t disappointed!

This time though I stumbled across the Moor Lane Clean Air Pop-Up Community Garden created in 2017 as part of the Low Emission Neighbourhood, and completely new to me. The garden intended to raise awareness of air quality in the City and to encourage pedestrians to take low emission routes to the Barbican station, the Barbican Centre and towards Guildhall using the Podium walkways.

Designed by three young landscape designers known as Studio xmpl, they worked pro bono with Friends of City Gardeners a City-based community group of garden volunteers, who now jointly maintain the garden along with the City of London Corporation’s City Gardens team.

The garden has been constructed from 57 galvanised steel pipes and all plants were chosen for their ability to trap particulates and improve air quality, as well as provided cover and forage for birds and nectar-rich flowers for pollinators.

In 2020 poet Kit Finnie and the Guildhall School of Music & Drama worked with local community groups to create poems which reflected on this garden, the pandemic and what the city means to them.

you have the power
to break something.
a common truth but
still. it comes to you
like ice water gulped
at 3am. joy that
streams freely from
the tap and cupped
hands to catch it in.
the air around your
body. all the london
beyond. beyond
that. another truth.
home is the thing
that settles round
your most beloved
person when they’re
still.

It was a garden full of structure, texture and shape with lush greenery and luckily on the day I visited sunlight glinting off the City offices behind. No doubt a great spot for City workers to eat their lunch.

I loved the poetry too, and wished I’d known about this place before - though of course I stopped working in the City in 2014, so a few years before this was created. But it’s the kind of place I’d have loved to escape to with colleagues, or alone, for lunch.

a distant hush is
an opportunity for
abundance. so is
a pigeon. a seed.
a baby animal. a
stranger biking to
the office. the sound
of a drill. a city fox. a
decision to attend.
a steady beat. a
gentle nudge. a
pavement.
new shoes. the
future. therapy. a
crush. printer paper.
wandering. the
climate crisis. your
inhale. your exhale.
this.

Somehow it seemed fitting that one of the ever increasing e-bikes parked up in the garden was green and labelled forest, less so that the building behind was a car park - but as with everything - balance!

inhale. exhale.
resilience is a
circle. a thread that
never ends. later.
you’ll savour this
encounter with
delight as fresh as
aloe. its audacity.
beating green in the
grey heart of your
city. feral moment
in your familiar day.
it will remind you
of the parts of
yourself that are
also a garden. a
poem. a breath. a
single leaf among
many.

I love discovering places like this, isn’t it great?

The Garden Year: May 2025

For this year’s Garden Year linky I’m continuing to share advice from Songbird Survival about how we can make our gardens the best they can be for birds.

This past month seems to have whizzed by and been one dominated by blossom, which is never a bad thing. Our little crab apple tree has finally blossomed and the branches are thick with white, fragrant flowers so I’m hopeful we’ll have a good crop of crab apples in the autumn. I also got my fill of blossom in the gardens at Gravetye Manor in West Sussex, and that’s the post I’ve linked this month. We also went along to the Newark Garden Show again at the end of April, so look out for a post from there soon.

#ThinkBirds

Consider taking part in #NoMowMay to support insect life, and/or celebrate International Dawn Chorus Day on Sunday 4 May by putting out a treat for the birds, and enjoying their birdsong.

Advice, inspiration and places to visit

Leave a link below to share what you’ve been up to in the last month, or add a comment sharing your plans for the upcoming month.

“TheGardenYear