Tuesday, 19 August 2014

How to build a stumpery - Part 2 - I've got more wood

Now that the groundwork has been done, it's time to plant out your stumpery and add all the personal touches.

And so as I mooched through garden centres getting excited at fern varieties I was suddenly hit by an epiphany. I've become a middle aged irrelevant. I get my kicks shuffling around garden centres drooling over plants and garden plans. It's a far cry from those halcyon days in my late teens and early twenties when I was in my prime but didn't even realise it....

Anyway, I digress.  I spent a few quid on a nice variety of ferns and then moved on to planting them out. I wanted to create the feeling of depth and so some were planted in tall pots or stood up on bricks. 

Of course you can simply build up the soil rather than using pots but I prefer pots as you can move them about. I sheathed the pots in bark which I peeled off from some logs from my woodpile. This hides those bland looking pots from sight giving a more natural feel. I also interspersed my  stumpery with logs to add some interest.

I spent some time plugging out my oak log with ferns and for a bit of diversity, I added a couple of winter flowering heathers on the top. The small cavity at the front provides a tiny, shaded  pool.
 
I then procured from my back garden, some naturally growing (and unwanted) moss. I don't want it in my lawn but in the right place it's just what I want. I specifically targeted the shadier areas, under the stump, around the bases of the wooden mushrooms and fern pots.

I took a walk to my local woodland and grabbed a bag or two of leaf litter. This is great stuff. It's already breaking down and is crawling with invertebrates - just what I need to kick-start my stumpery ecosystem. I spread it liberally in the more brighter areas where the moss is not likely to take.
Finally I top-dressed the fern pots with moss and leaf litter to try and hide anything man-made and to make it look as natural as possible.

So after a few weeks bedding in, this is the finished article. It's already home to a few baby frogs and a lots of crawling insects. In time I know some things will die and some with thrive. I am hoping I have enough of a balance that I won't be left with any gaping holes. Some of the moss has already dies but in some other areas, new moss is growing so overall I'm happy with the results. 












The great thing is, it's full of life. Harriet spends ages peering into the nooks and crannies - completely transfixed. I may add some subtle solar lighting later but not sure just yet. At the moment I'm just happy with what is now a full on nature garden providing a wide diversity for our local wildlife


Friday, 8 August 2014

As Marvin Gaye said: "Whats going on??"


Humankind - what a thing to behold. 

Despite all our achievements,  all our abilities, all our potential, we have  evolved into a species for which one of our strongest traits is our willingness to kill each other.

We have perfected the ability to rape the planets resources and push every other living thing on the planet to the limits of their existence. and when we aren't doing that, our causal approach to dumping our toxic filth into our oceans or skies and back into the food-chain poisons the Earth.

Is there any other species quite like us?  Our selfish disregard for every living thing that we know to exist in the entire universe is rather tragic. Because of we succeed where constant wars fail and we kill off enough key species, we will ultimately be committing suicide. We cannot naively think we can patch-fix the holes we create on our ecosystem that mother nature has taken millennia to perfect.

The dinosaurs had the right approach. We take the term 'dinosaur' and label our parents with it to mean  someone set in their ways - plodding and slow to change  - but the fact is, the dinosaurs were around for over 165 million years and  they are often rated as being the most successful species on the planet. Perhaps their success was their small brains and thus, lack of any Einsteinian intelligence. They weren't fussed about world domination. They just got on with life and let Mother Nature decide the variables. This simplistic approach would likely still be going on now and our ancestors would be no more than furry shrews in the ground if it hadn't been for a series of catacysmic events to come together in a perfect storm and wipe them out. 

We talk about possible pandemics sweeping the globe when in fact it is us that are the disease. The simple truth is that this planet would likely be a wonderful harmonious ecosystem if we could just remove ourselves from the equation. 

Perhaps what we need is a more superior species or omnipotent being to decide enough is enough and for the good of Earth and every other living thing on the planet, it's time to come on down and sort us out. 

Dear Lord - perhaps the time has come to make another appearance.