Beeplantastic

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Garden makeovers from traditional to tropical, wildlife friendly to sophisticated styles with advice to bring your own ideas to your garden and to also help wildlife thrive!

It's that time of the year, beautiful rhododendrons are flowering everywhere,  here's a handy photo guide for you if you...
16/05/2026

It's that time of the year, beautiful rhododendrons are flowering everywhere, here's a handy photo guide for you if you want to take cuttings and of course photos of ours! Feel free to post photos of yours in the comments!!πŸ€©πŸ’œπŸ€©πŸ’œ

Some climbing plants cover an entire wall in three seasons and need no more than one square metre of ground. These nine ...
12/05/2026

Some climbing plants cover an entire wall in three seasons and need no more than one square metre of ground. These nine species transform a bare fence, a trellis, or a pergola into a curtain of flowers without occupying any more space at ground level.

The most reliable for starting out: clematis, honeysuckle, and jasmine. All three attach easily to a simple trellis, tolerate ordinary garden soil, and produce a good display from their second year.

For a balcony or patio: blue passionflower (Passiflora caerulea) grows in a container of at least 40 litres, flowers through the summer, and suits a sheltered south-facing wall. It is rated RHS H3, meaning it tolerates short spells down to around -5Β°C, but in northern England and Scotland it benefits from fleece protection in hard winters or an indoor overwintering in its early years.

Wisteria is the most spectacular of the group but also the most demanding. Its roots are powerful enough to lift paving and weaken render within ten years if the plant is not properly anchored and trained from the start. On a robust structure with annual pruning β€” twice a year, without exception β€” it becomes the defining feature of a garden for fifty years. Left to its own devices, it becomes a structural problem.

Climbing hydrangea is the most underused on this list. It thrives on a north-facing wall where almost nothing else flowers, clings by self-adhesive pads, and requires virtually no maintenance once established.

Campsis radicans needs a warm sheltered south-facing wall and is most reliable in southern England β€” but in the right position, the orange trumpet flowers from midsummer onwards are outstanding.

A well-anchored climber goes where the rest of the garden cannot.

Well Spring is almost over, bulbs are starting to disappear and rest until next year and summer is on the way! Feel free...
02/05/2026

Well Spring is almost over, bulbs are starting to disappear and rest until next year and summer is on the way! Feel free to post photos of your bulb displays in the comments!πŸ€©πŸ‘ŒπŸ’œπŸ‘

Really interesting!
02/05/2026

Really interesting!

Species recovery, cancer-preventing vaccines and progress in developing renewable-energy sources are just some of the positive developments that have happened this year so far.

Thirty years ago, the average British garden sheltered hedgehogs crossing the lawn at dusk, swallows nesting under the g...
02/05/2026

Thirty years ago, the average British garden sheltered hedgehogs crossing the lawn at dusk, swallows nesting under the garage eaves, glow-worms flickering along the hedge in June, common toads patrolling the borders after rain, and house sparrows squabbling over crumbs on the breakfast terrace.

That garden still exists. But it has fallen quiet.

The European hedgehog has declined by 30 to 50 per cent across much of Britain since the 1990s. The cause is not a predator β€” it is fragmentation. Solid fencing, rendered walls, and unbroken boundary structures have carved the landscape into sealed parcels. A hedgehog needs to travel two to three kilometres each night to feed. A fully enclosed garden is a trap, not a home. Cutting a 13 Γ— 13 cm gap at the base of a fence reconnects an entire neighbourhood.

The barn swallow has lost a significant portion of its UK breeding population since the 1970s. It nests in open barns, garages, and outbuildings β€” spaces that were routinely left open a generation ago. Today, barns are converted to holiday lets, garage doors are automated, and outbuildings are sealed. The swallow returns each April to last year's nest and finds a closed door. A 10 cm opening left in place from March to September restores the site.

The common glow-worm (Lampyris noctiluca) has disappeared from most suburban gardens. The cause is measurable: artificial light. The female emits a soft green glow at ground level to attract the flying male. A single security light floods that signal with competing photons. The male cannot find the female. Breeding stops. Switching off outdoor lights between 10 pm and 6 am from May to September is enough to restore it.

The common toad (Bufo bufo) returns each spring to the pond where it hatched. If that pond has been filled, paved over, or left to dry out β€” there is no fallback. A permanent pond of just 2 mΒ², even without fish, re-establishes the breeding cycle within two to three years.

The house sparrow has declined by more than 50 per cent in UK towns and cities since the 1970s according to BTO monitoring. The cause is twofold: loss of nesting cavities as buildings are insulated and sealed, and collapse of the insects that chicks depend on in their first two weeks. A nest box with a 32 mm entrance hole and a patch of unsprayed lawn address both.

The peacock, small tortoiseshell, and red admiral β€” three butterflies that once visited every British garden β€” have become scarce in suburban areas. All three breed exclusively on nettles. A garden without nettles is a garden without these butterflies. Leaving one square metre of nettles in a sheltered corner is sufficient.

Solitary bees β€” mason bees, mining bees, and plasterer bees β€” need bare, firm soil for their nest tunnels and flowers from March to October. A fully mulched, regularly weeded garden planted with sterile ornamentals provides neither. A south-facing patch of bare earth and three metres of mixed flowering hedge restore both nesting habitat and foraging range.

The violet ground beetle (Carabus violaceus), the large metallic-blue predatory beetle that once patrolled vegetable rows after dark, has been lost from many gardens through slug pellet use and deep digging. Its larvae develop in the top ten centimetres of soil. Ground disturbance destroys them; slug control products harm the beetles that were eating the slugs. A no-dig approach and avoiding all pellets allows the ground beetle to return within two seasons.

The decline is not abstract. Each species that disappeared had an address β€” your roof, your hedge, your lawn, your pond, your wall. Each cause is identifiable. Each solution is within reach, costs almost nothing, and works within three years.

πŸ¦”πŸΈπŸ¦‹πŸŒΏ

04/03/2026

Spring has landed! The buzzys have been back for afew weeks now but all out in force today with the lovely warmer temperatures enjoying the Heathers!🀩🌞A lovely 16/17 degrees today, shorts on!πŸ˜πŸ‘Œ some interesting info for you all about why we garden for more months down here compared to the rest of the UK... West Cornwall is often described as having a sub-tropical or semi-tropical micro-climate. Technically classed as a temperate oceanic climate (Cfb) under broader, standard classifications, the region's unique conditions allow it to function as a "sub-tropical" oasis within the UK.
This is why we have this special climate:
Gulf Stream Influence: Warmed by the North Atlantic Drift (an extension of the Gulf Stream), also our Celtic sea is shallower compared to the Atlantic ocean and our area experiences some of the mildest winters and highest sunshine hours in the UK. Bonus!πŸ€©πŸ‘Œ
Rare Frosts: Because of this warmth, frost and snow are very rare in West Cornwall.
Sub-Tropical Flora: The climate allows plants that would perish elsewhere in Britain to thrive outdoors year-round, including palm trees (specifically Trachycarpus fortunei), tree ferns, agaves, and succulents.
Sheltered Valleys: Specific areas, create sheltered, humid, and warm pockets (micro-climates) that support lush,, tropical-looking gardens. The lack of extreme cold allows for a 12-month growing season that is unique compared to anywhere else in the UK which lastly explains why we are always about a month ahead as well! Happy gardening folks! πŸ‘ŒπŸπŸΈπŸ¦

Just like that Spring is here and it's time to get the mowers back to work after their Winter break! They have all been ...
04/03/2026

Just like that Spring is here and it's time to get the mowers back to work after their Winter break! They have all been maintained, sharpened and ready to go again for hopefully another great season! πŸ€©πŸ‘ŒπŸŒžπŸ‘

Time for a much needed Xmas and New year break after a fantastic year gardening, so whilst I hibernate like nature for a...
17/12/2025

Time for a much needed Xmas and New year break after a fantastic year gardening, so whilst I hibernate like nature for a little while, would just like to thank you all for your custom and wish you a very lovely Nadelik Lowen/ Merry Xmas and a happy new year, see you all in 2026! Cheers! πŸŽ…πŸ‘ŒπŸŒ²πŸ€©

09/12/2025
So easy to grow, we have some inside and outside, scientists have confirmed that the humble spider plant is one of the m...
09/12/2025

So easy to grow, we have some inside and outside, scientists have confirmed that the humble spider plant is one of the most powerful natural air purifiers found in homes. In controlled studies, a single plant removed up to 95% of harmful airborne chemicals β€” including formaldehyde, mold spores, benzene, and other pollutants β€” within a 24-hour window.
Spider plants work like living filters: their leaves pull contaminants from the air while microbes in the soil break them down into harmless compounds. Unlike electronic air purifiers, they require no electricity, produce no noise, and continue cleaning around the clock.
This makes them especially useful for bedrooms, offices, schools, and homes with poor ventilation. For people with allergies or chemical sensitivities, spider plants can significantly improve indoor air quality with almost no maintenance.
Nature has always offered solutions β€” we just need to remember to bring them indoors.

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