MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
Wicca Way[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Board Listings  
  Rules *Read First*  
  General  
  Classes  
  Post Discussion  
  Coming Sabbat  
  Spell Craft  
  SpellCrafting  
  Health  
  Home  
  Garden Magick  
  Job & Career  
  Love Spells  
  Animal Spells  
  Misc. Spells  
  Money/Prosperity  
  Protection Spell  
  Kitchen Witch  
  Kitchen Witchin'  
  Oils  
  Pregnancy Info  
  Witchy Diet  
  Simplings  
  Wortcunning  
  A Kitchen Witch  
  Witchy Crafting  
  Beading  
  Sewing  
  Scrapbooking  
  Witchy Cooking  
  Kitchen Tips  
  Brews  
  Alcoholic Brews  
  Appetizers  
  Breakfast Ideas  
  Bread Recipes  
  Fruity Delight  
  Veggie Recipes  
  Salads  
  Main Dish  
  Casseroles  
  Side Dish  
  Soups & Stews  
  Diabetic Recipes  
  Foreign Foods  
  Beef & Veal  
  Lamb & Pork  
  Poultry  
  Fish & Sea Food  
  Wild Game  
  Cabin Cookin'  
  Pie Recipes  
  Cakes & Cupcakes  
  Candies  
  Cookies & Bars  
  Special Desserts  
  Sabbat & Esbet  
  Kid Recipes  
  H Potter Recipes  
  Jams & Spreads  
  Sauses & More  
  Spice Blends  
  Nature's Cures  
  Natures Cures  
  Ask For aid...  
  Women's Health  
  Natural Pet Care  
  Green Witchery  
  Witch's Garden  
  DreamScape  
  Divination  
  Psychic Powers  
  Dowsing  
  Palmstry  
  Scrying  
  Tarot  
  Other Divination  
  Celtic  
  Native American  
  Familiars&Guides  
  Native American  
  Medicine Wheel  
  Witches' Year  
  Samhain  
  )0(Samhain)0(  
  Yule  
  )0(Yule)0(  
  Beltane  
  )0(Beltane)0(  
  Ostara  
  )0(Ostara)0(  
  Midsummer  
  )0(Midsummer)0(  
  Imbolc  
  )0(Imbloc)0(  
  Lughnasadh  
  Mabon  
  )0( Mabon )0(  
  Otherworlds  
  Astrology  
  Elements  
  Air  
  Earth  
  Fire  
  Water  
  Spirit  
  ~Book of Shadows~  
  Book of Shadows  
  Alters/Spaces  
  Goddesses  
  Gods  
  Invoking  
  Blessings  
  Rituals  
  Witches Year  
  Sacred Stones  
  Pagan Living  
  Pagan Families  
  Pagan Parenting  
  Indigo Children  
  Green Living  
  Pagan Traditions  
  Druid & Celtics  
  Paganism  
  Shamanism  
  Wicca  
  Other Traditions  
  Magick  
  Candle Magick  
  Wicca Magick  
  Color Magick  
  Dragon Magick  
  Faerie Magick  
  Moon Magick  
  Tree Magick  
  Seasonal Magick  
  Spring Magick  
  Summer Magick  
  Fall Magick  
  Winter Magick  
  Chinese Medicine  
  Feng Shui Living  
  Tai Chi  
  Yoga  
  Reiki  
  Shiatsu  
  Meditations  
  Auras  
  Labyrinths  
  Chakras  
  ~Wiccan Entertainment~  
  Witchy Movies...  
  BeWitched  
  Charmed  
  Dark Shadows  
  Harry Potter  
  News  
  News Clippings  
  Supernatural  
  Recommended Read  
  Quizzes  
  Jokes 101  
  Muses Learning Board  
  Kitten Muse's  
  Mousey Muse's  
  Sylvar Muse's  
  Amathiya Muse's  
  Pictures  
  Amathiya  
  Madame Mousey  
  Graphix Free 4 All  
  Lady Sylvar  
  Kitten  
  Wicca Way Dates  
    
  Links  
  Witch Trials  
  
  
  Tools  
 
Witch's Garden : PLANNING a WILDLIFE GARDEN
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 2 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameLadySylvarMoon  (Original Message)Sent: 3/3/2007 8:45 PM
</MYMAILSTATIONERY>
 
Planning a Wildlife Garden
Follow these tips for welcoming birds and butterflies to your yard.
 
 Source: Better Homes & Gardens
Butterfly
 

When you welcome birds and butterflies to your yard, you add colors, movements, and sounds that make your garden seem more alive and vibrant. The following tips from the National Audubon Society will help you create a habitat that allows wildlife to flourish.


  • Plant for food sources. Birds are attracted to seeds, berries, fruits, and nectar. Migrating birds such as tanagers, robins, orioles, and Cedar Waxwings may stop for several days to feast before they continue on their long flights. Butterflies -- essential pollinators in the garden -- need flowers that have nectar, such as those in the Aster family.
  • Offer a variety of plants for nesting and protection from predators. Bushy shrubs, canopy trees, and groundcovers will provide the nooks and crannies birds and other wildlife need to nest and find good. Such plants also provide protection from sun, wind, and rain.
  • A water source is essential. The single most important thing you can do to attract birds is to provide a source of dripping water. Keep it low to the ground, but make sure it's protected from cats.
  • Create a dust bath. Birds use dust baths to clean themselves and get rid of parasites. Try building a small area (about 3 feet square) bordered with attractive rocks or bricks. Fill with loose soil (a mix of sand, ash, and loam). The bath will attract native sparrows, thrashers, and other ground-dwelling birds.
  • Provide nesting materials. Fill a loosely woven net bag with clean dryer lint or scraps of yarn or string. Make sure the holes in the bag are large enough for birds to pull out bits for their nests. Orioles, robins, and chickadees will be most appreciative.
  • Offer supplemental food. If you live in a cold climate, offer a supplemental food source, such as seeds, suet, and fruit, during the winter months for woodpepckeers, bluebirds, and other species.
  • Plan for windbreaks for shelter. If your climate is windy, provide shelter in your wildlife-friendly garden. Plant tall, deciduous trees at the edge of the property, with progressively smaller trees and shrubs as you near the house.
  • Provide perches. Although butterflies are attracted to tubular, nectar-bearing flowers, they also need flat flowers where they can rest. A good variety of flowers, shrubs, and trees will provide plenty of resting sites. Birds need exposed perching places; dead twigs and small snags are the most beneficial. Thin bamboo poles stuck into the ground will attract resting dragonflies.
  • Plant groundcovers and create slopes. Birds such as sparrows, thrashers, and thrushes find their food among fallen leaves and groundcovers, where they search for insects. Rosemary, Lantana, and creeping juniper are good choices. Creating artificial slopes in the garden provide more nooks and crannies for birds to forage.
  • Provide a variety of plants. Birds and butterflies are attracted to colorful, flowering plants that provide food and camouflage. It's important to select plants that produce seeds and fruit in various seasons of the year.
</MYMAILSTATIONERY>


First  Previous  2 of 2  Next  Last 
Reply
 Message 2 of 2 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameLadySylvarMoonSent: 3/3/2007 9:26 PM
</MYMAILSTATIONERY>
Gardens for Birds and Butterflies
 
Content provided by
Better Homes & Gardens logo
Back to Nature
Birds love natural gardens because they can find all they need to survive in them. Seed heads of perennials and ornamental grasses provide food. Shrubs, trees, and some perennials offer shelter and nesting places. A birdbath contains water for drinking and bathing. You, meanwhile, gain the benefit of natural pest control because many birds eat hundreds of insects daily.

When you plan a natural wildlife garden, include a diverse selection of plants—trees, shrubs, grasses, perennials, and annuals that reseed. Birds and other wildlife won't care if you have the latest cultivars; in fact, they prefer species and older varieties. Look for plants indigenous to your area, because they will look the most natural in it.

Build a Handmade Birdbath
Birdbath with bird-friendly plants
This special handmade birdbath belongs nestled in a flower bed where admirers will never know that it was so easy to make. You don't need a fancy mold to fashion the 18- to 20-inch basin. You can even use a cardboard box instead of the ground, as long as the box is at least 4 inches wider than the basin's width. Fill it 10 inches deep with soil; then scoop a basin shape in the soil.

What you need
  • Hoe or shovel
  • Protective gear: rubber gloves, safety glasses, dust mask
  • Spray bottle and water
  • 3 gallons premixed concrete
  • Peat moss
  • Crushed, colored recycled glass
  • Rock specimens
  • Sheet of plastic

Step 1: Shaping a hole in the ground
1. Dig and shape a hole in the ground (or in a cardboard box filled with 10 inches of soil) as a mold. Sprinkle the shape with water and pack down the soil firmly. Tamp a flat area in the center so the finished basin will sit securely on a flat surface.

Step 2: Mixing the peat moss and concrete
2. Wear protective gear. Combine 3 gallons of premixed concrete with 2 to 3 cups of peat moss in a wheelbarrow. Add about 2 gallons of water and quickly mix with a hoe to make a stiff batter. If it is too thin, add more concrete; if too thick to hold together, add water.

Step 3: Patting the concrete mix into place
3. Work quickly, concrete starts to set in minutes. Shovel the wet mix into the mold. Scoop concrete from the center of the basin to the outside rim. Pat it into place, conforming it to the shape of the basin. Pat smooth. Spritz with water to keep concrete moist.

Step 4: Decorating with crushed glass
4. Decorate the basin by sprinkling crushed recycled glass on the wet mix; press gently into place. You also can use other decorative pieces such as stones. Cover the basin with a plastic sheet; let cure for 3 to 7 days. Uncover; let age for 1 month before filling with water.

Plant a Butterfly Garden
Butterfly garden, with perennials and shrubs for larval needs and other plants for nectar
Butterflies need the warmth of the sun and appreciate a flat stone or two for basking. You will see them gather in groups if you provide a shallow puddle where they can drink. Protect them from strong winds with a garden near a few shrubs or trees that act as a windbreak.

You can incorporate butterfly plants into an existing bed or border or plant a separate garden. To a butterfly, fragrance is not as important as color, although it does play a role. The eyes of a butterfly perceive a shade of yellow, red, and blue to lavender. The best flowering plants for a butterfly garden are wild or species forms rather than hybrids, single-flowered instead of double-flowered, and tubular or flat-topped. Plant in large groups; individual spots of color are less attractive than a broad wash of hues. Groups of 10 or more of the same color work well.

Butterfly on butterfly weed
Bee balm and purple coneflower are two of the best plants for attracting butterflies. Plant groups of them around a weather fountain, and shelter the garden with a backdrop of evergreens.

Other butterfly-friendly plants include anise hyssop, black-eyed Susan, butterfly weed, coreopsis, dianthus, garden phlox, Queen Anne's lace, red valerian, thyme, and vervain.

</MYMAILSTATIONERY>