I've just read the thread about cutting the lawn and note that many of you have already done so. Monty Don recently asked for people not to cut lawns in order for the wild flowers to grow and many places are now doing this, including King's College, Cambridge and the National Trust. The various garden shows on tv often have people who have started to leave parts of their lawn uncut and they look beautiful (IMO)
After Prince Charles bought Highgrove he asked Miriam Rotshchild for assistance in planning a wildlife garden. There were many articles in the press over the next few years showing paths cut through meadows.
When house hunting in Suffolk in the mid eighties we looked at an old cottage that had a 1 acre meadow attached to the garden which had not been ploughed since the war, or sprayed. It was this that prompted us to buy the house. Throughout the year there was a wide variety of wildflowers, including pyramid orchids. There was a path mown through the middle which we kept trimmed. Otherwise the field was cut in the autumn to allow the flower seeds to fall.
When we sold that house our buyer told us that it was the field that convinced him that it was the right house for him and his wife. The new owner has continued to leave the field as a wildflower meadow.
So, I am giving a link to an article in the Guardian about this, which may be of interest.
www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2021/mar/13/lawn-growers-throw-in-trowel-meadows-replace-perfect-stripes
Hundreds of illegal migrants to be put in existing military barracks
How would you rank the last 6 British Prime Minister's
Infuriated by this man's attitude
I miss the woman my daughter was before she lost her husband
On his advice we sank a bucket in the garden and filled it with water and for a while had newts. Unfortunately our garden is clay and gets very muddy and the bucket eventually filled up with mud - we never emptied it because we were always a bit worried about hedgehogs falling in and not being able to get out as it was deep.