Some visitors are very quiet when they enter my garden. I can imagine their suppressed horror and their hands itching to clear it. They might venture something along the lines of “Your trees are so green” and happily move indoors. Others exclaim with delight and say something along the lines of “I hope we’re going to have tea outdoors.” I enjoy the latter.
Of course there are a myriad commonly planted flowers that not only look beautiful, but are attractive to a variety of pollinators. Years of drought cycles have taught me the harsh lesson about the amount of water required to keep flowerbeds looking attractive year-round. Indigenous plants, on the other hand, may not be as ‘showy’, yet they have consistently proved to be hardier and require a lot less water.
We all know that the availability of water is an important factor when gardening. For me shade (our summers get very hot), privacy, pollinators, and especially attracting birds have been priority guiding factors in my gardening endeavours – another is that I get by with very little assistance.
On with indigenous plants that birds also enjoy.
Aloes may look drab to some for much of the year. I enjoy their various shapes and spiky leaves. When they are ablaze with colour during the winter, however, it is difficult not to admire them.
Their nectar-rich flowers emerge at the time of year when food is more difficult to find. Apart from insects, a host of birds are attracted to the flowers. These include weavers, Cape White-eyes, sunbirds, and Blackheaded Orioles.
Our garden is too large for one person to handle comfortably and so, since our arrival, I set the bottom terrace aside as a ‘wild’ garden. I call it my ‘Secret Garden’ and – other than clearing a path through it once a year – let it be. This section is dominated by an enormous Natal fig that attracts African Green Pigeons, Knysna Turacos, Redwinged Starlings, Speckled Mousebirds, Black-collared Barbets, Blackeyed Bulbuls, Paradise Flycatchers, Redeyed Doves, Hadeda Ibises, and Grey Sparrows, to mention a few. We have planted many other indigenous trees over the decades, which have now matured and provide both food and shelter. Clivias also abound in this garden.
As you can imagine, the leaf litter here is thick and spongy underfoot. It is regularly raked over by Olive Thrushes and Cape Robin-chats. Red-necked Spurfowl comb through it as do pigeons and doves. I strongly suspect a Fiery-necked Nightjar has found refuge there too. Wood from dead exotic trees has been left to rot: providing a home for insects and food for Cardinal Woodpeckers and Green Woodhoopoes.
You could accurately describe my garden as ‘wild and woolly’ – many regard it as being unkempt. I love it: I garden for birds and my monthly bird lists prove that a wide variety of avian visitors do too. Some indigenous plants, such as the Cape Honeysuckle and Canary Creepers, are rampant growers that need to be kept in check by pruning once they have flowered. Both provide a rich supply of nectar that attracts a variety of bird, bees, butterflies and other insects. Here is a Cape Honeysuckle:
This is a small sprig of canary creeper:
The indigenous Plumbago not only produces beautiful blue blossoms that attract various pollinators, but the thickly tangled stems are ideal nesting spots for Cape Wagtails, Cape Robin-chats and Cape White-eyes. Plumbago also needs regular pruning to keep it in check.
Large Erythrina caffra trees dominate our back garden. Apart from hosting Hadeda Ibises at night, their bounty of lichen-covered branches, seasonal leaves, seeds and beautiful scarlet blossoms attract a host of birds such as weavers, Cape Crows, African Hoopoes, Fork-tailed Drongos, African Green Pigeons, Speckled Mousebirds and Green Woodhoopoes.
A similar variety of birds are attracted to the Crossberries that have seeded themselves all over the garden as well as this Puzzle Bush at our back gate.
They also enjoy the Dais cotonifolia trees – some planted and others self-seeded.
The very beautiful Cape Chestnut tree we planted about thirty years ago attracts a variety of pollinators and birds too.
Birds and indigenous plants go hand-in-hand and are a recipe for tranquillity and joy – whatever the season!
I feel as if I have taken a walk through your garden – can almost smell the flowers and trees, even the leaf litter, that you have described and photographed
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Thank you, Don. You can appreciate why my bird lists are fairly lengthy at the end of each month 🙂
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I would definitely want tea in your garden. Oh, those birds!
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I would love to entertain you here on a sunny day. Even on an overcast one such as today the sound of birds is music to my ears.
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Your garden sounds like an idyllic haven to me. You figured it out years before most other gardeners. Now that native gardens are catching on, your garden is going to be much more in vogue. 🙂
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Possibly 🙂 I think my attitude to gardening stems from having lived on the edge of a desert for eight years. There not even a blade of grass would grow – or if it did, it would be carried away by harvester ants!
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Looks like a haven (or should that be heaven?) for all wildlife and non-gardeners like me! All those plants look beautiful.
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Oh mine is ideal for non-gardeners: it thrives on benign neglect 🙂
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Stunning birds & blooms Anne!
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Thank you, Cindy. They provide cheer throughout the year 🙂 🙂
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What a beautiful selection of flowers! I have never seen aloe blooms.
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I am likely to over supply pictures of them once the flowering season begins in earnest. A few have started blooming already.
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I really enjoyed the “walk” through your garden, Anne! What a wonderful oasis for you, the birds, insects and us, your readers😊. I’d have a hard time going indoors.
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Our garden has changed from the cactus-filled, gravel-strewn garden we inherited to this tree-filled oasis over thirty years. It is amazing what a change has been wrought during that time.
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That certainly looks like a feast for your visitors.
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We are seldom sans birds somewhere in the garden.
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Like the A-Team’s Hannibal “I love it when a plan comes together!” and for sure, Anne, that is so true about your garden!
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Thank you, Dries 🙂 🙂
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Such an exuberant description in prose and poetry of your enticing garden. The wild section is after my own heart.
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I think you and Jackie would enjoy wandering through my garden 🙂
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I can see why you have so many different birds in your garden Anne! Beautiful 😀
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Thank you, Aletta 🙂
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😊
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Jy kan inderdaad trots wees op jou tuin, Anne. Jy het wondere verrig, en met jou kennis ñ lushof geskep.❤️
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Ek voel gelukkig in my tuin – baie dankie 🙂 🙂
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Dear Anne, So lovely that you have created a perfect habitat to encourage birds into your garden, very special! xxx
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Thank you Christeen. It is good to hear from you 🙂
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I’d love to walk through your garden, Anne! The purple bush is eye-catching.
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It would be fun to accompany you on a walk around my garden 🙂
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Pingback: This week’s small pleasures #327 – Thistles and Kiwis
Reblogged this on Wolf's Birding and Bonsai Blog.
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When the bird matches the bloom …
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In this case, mostly trees that bear nectar-rich blooms or copious berries which the birds enjoy 🙂
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