Small tortoiseshell butterfly illustration by Chris ShieldsI don't know about you, but with the excitement of Christmas and New Year celebrations over, January can seem to stretch out with not much to look forward to.

However, one look out of my window and January doesn't seem so bad after all; whether it's a mixed flock of tits hanging in a tree, a blackbird trying out bits of his song and the wren angrily moving him along, or the local starlings looking for tasty grub in the lawn, I could look at their antics in my garden for hours.

I enjoy watching wildlife, and being lucky enough to work on a nature reserve I get more than my fair share of wildlife fixes. However, when wildlife vists my garden it always feels somehow more special. The birds are visiting my garden because they like what it offers - the shelter it brings, the plants that I'm growing, or maybe the water and additional food that I put out for them.

How cool - my own personal nature reserve, and right outside the backdoor. And the best thing is, you don't have to have acres of space to make a difference for wildlife, either.

I'm lucky that I have a decent-sized garden in which there is already a good variety of plants for wildlife (more by accident than design, mind!) - we let nettles grow in amongst our flower borders (great for attracting butterflies), have plenty of bushes that provide both shelter and juicy berries for the birds to eat, and even have a spot of dead wood lying around (great for mosses, lichens and insects).

However, this weekend as I helped prune the hazel - getting in before the birds start nesting - I got to thinking that there was probably still a lot more I could do in the garden to attract a greater variety of birds and other wildlife.

The great thing is the changes can be as huge, or as small, as I want - I could let parts of the lawn grow longer before mowing, maybe I'll get really ambitious and create a pond for dragon- and damselflies to visit, or I could put up a hanging basket or plant out a window box with a variety of wildflowers that'll not only look pretty, but be great for insects and the birds that eat the insects!

Like the blackbird practising his song in the hope of attracting the best mate he can, I am reminded that maybe this year I should try a few new things in the garden in the hope of attracting the best mix of wildlife I can.

What can you do?

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  • Thanks for suggested sites to upload my 'photos onto.  Will certainly investigate these. Lovely day here so many birds singing, spring bulbs nearly in flower - so perhaps we will have an early Spring.

  • Dear Mopples, if you visit a site called www.wildaboutbritain.co.uk you can put photographs on to share with others. Well done for getting pictures of the goldfinches. I get so wrapped up in spotting that I forget the camera until too late!

  • I honestly think I'm the luckiest gardener in the world!!! I have a big garden which sort of surrounds the house really.

    I have a "wet area" which houses toads and newts. They love the ferns and bamboo to lurk around in.

    I have feeders hanging on lots of the branches of the laburnam and rowan in the front garden and have lots of visitors. Coal tit,great tit,chaffinch.sparrow,blue tit,dunnok,long tail tit,bull finch,green finch,collared dove,blackbird,starling,crow,jackdaw, wren and goldfinch to name but a few. Hedgehogs,rabbits,moles,foxes,bats all visit on a regular basis.

    I see kites,buzzards,heron,deer almost every day as I walk my dogs. I hear the owls every other night.

    Iwouldn't swap this part of the world for anything!!!!!

    I'm looking forward to spring when the thrush will perch on the high treetops and sing to wake me in the morning.

    yes... my garden right now is very untidy,full of old sedheads and dead grasses and some leftover berries but i dont mind the visitors love it! ! !

  • Mopples - if you want to upload your pics easily to share with others, I can suggest you use a photohosting site like www.flickr.com if you do not have your own website set up. :)  I use Flickr - I think I'd be a bit lost without it!

  •   We only have a small garden but we get loads of different birds that visit.  We have hedges which the sparrows and other birds love to be in (and even nest too), a cherry tree which they perch in (and eat all the cherries), a bird table where we put scraps for the small birds, a small lawn where the starlings and thrushes look for food and most important of all a bird bath where they all come to drink and spash in the water.   There are no rivers nearby and the nearest pond or lake is a long way off too;  so we always make sure that there is water for the birds all year round (especially when it is very hot or when it freezes).   As a result we get sparrows, bluetits, long tailed tits, wrens, dunlings, blackbirds, thrushes, starlings, magpies, crows, pigeons, doves, seagulls, kestrels, woodpeckers and other visitors.