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How to...plant an alpine container for bees and bugs

You may or may not have seen the wildlife enquiries blog from last week about gardening in drought conditions. I suggested opting for species that were not quite as thirsty as traditional bedding plants. Well, at the weekend I decided to put this into practice in my haphazard approach to gardening and take some snaps along the way to show you what I mean. So here goes.

You need a bag of (peat free) compost, some grit, some larger bits of rock or rubble, a selection of wildlife friendly alpine plants, a large pot with drainage holes and maybe a trowel if you don't want to get mud under your fingernails!

Next up is to mix the grit with the compost, i went for a 50/50 split. Before you pop the substrate into the pot place the larger rocks in the bottom of the pot.

Next up is the planting, I picked a selection that will hopefully flower through the spring and summer giving a varity of colour and some nice foliage, the arabis and saxifrage were already in flower. The others were a scabious, two varities of sedum and another saxifrage (will add the full names if I get round to it!).

The last couple of things were to water them in, finish the gaps with a bit of grit and then place it in a sunny spot near to the strawberries to hopefully attract in a few more bees to help with pollination. We'll see how it goes!

 

Warden Intern at Otmoor.