A well-designed small garden can be home to many species of wildlife - from pollinators to birds and small animals. In a neighbourhood of many small gardens, it becomes part of a larger habitat or corridor in which wildlife can live and thrive.
Chameleons, for instance, naturally wander, and in suburbs with smaller gardens, they prefer properties that connect to larger green corridors which join several properties.
Chameleons also tend to avoid places such as:
Foliage should not be heavily pruned or trimmed, or exposed to insecticide and other poisons, as this usually kills or injures chameleons - as well as other small animals, birds, and insects.
Basic design
It's important to work within your garden's limitations, keeping plantings simple. If you have 30 plant species in 30m2 your garden will look cluttered. Instead, choose up to 10 species and try to have two or three indigenous grasses, restios, or sedges.
Grasses, sedges, and restios are low-maintenance plants that provide an excellent base layer that ties the rest of the plantings together.
Colour
In a 30m2 garden, you could include four to six species of flowering perennials, planted in clumps of two to three. Planting in clumps creates an organised landscape and serves as a strong beacon for pollinators flying overhead.
Choose winter- and summer-flowering plants to ensure your garden will have colour all year round, and provide food for wild birds and insects.
Winter-flowering plants include:
Summer-flowering plants:
Finishing touches
If there's room against the edge of the garden, consider planting a small tree - one with spring flowers for pollinators and autumn or winter fruits for birds.
Using the suggestions above, you will be able to create a small garden that is every bit as attractive and supportive of nature as a large garden.
Article Courtesy Northglen News