Big or small, ponds for all!

Big or small, ponds for all!

For this year’s Wild About Gardens challenge, The Wildlife Trusts and the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) are calling on people to put in a pond.
Garden pond - Paul Debois

Garden pond. Image by: Paul Debois.

From mini container ponds to larger sunken ponds, it’s THE garden feature that can make the biggest difference to wildlife.   

With much of the UK’s native flora and fauna under threat, often down to habitat loss, Wild About Gardens sees the charities, including Northumberland Wildlife Trust, join forces to raise awareness of the importance of gardens in supporting wildlife and offer tips and advice on how to make them more wildlife-friendly. 

The UK has lost ponds, rivers and streams at a rapid rate and only a small amount of our natural ponds and wetlands remain. Many of these are in poor condition and 13% of freshwater and wetland species are threatened with extinction from Great Britain.* The loss of these important places to development, drainage and intensive farming is linked to a huge decline in wildlife, including frogs and toads, water voles and insects.

Adding a pond - by digging one in your back garden or simply by filling a waterproof container outside your front door - is one of the best ways you can help wildlife and enjoy the benefits of seeing water plants, birds and bees close to home.

Digging a pond is great for hedgehogs to have somewhere to drink and for frogs, newts and other amphibians to feed and breed. All ponds, large, small, dug or container, are good news for bats, damselflies, dragonflies, other insects.

Geoff Dobbins, Senior Estates Officer at Northumberland Wildlfie Trust says: “It’s such fun to help wildlife with a pocket pond - it needn’t be big. All you need to do is fill an old sink or washing-up bowl with rainwater, plant it up and make sure that wildlife can get in and out - it’s that easy! I love watching bright blue damselflies landing on the irises in my pond and  lying in the bath listening to the frogs in the pond underneath the bathroom window.”

Helen Bostock, Senior Horticultural Advisor at the RHS says: “Ponds and other water features are an attractive focal point in any garden and are a real haven for wildlife. Even cheap container ponds made from upcycled materials will quickly be colonised by a whole host of creatures and help form a living chain of aquatic habitats across the neighbourhood.”

The Wild About Gardens team is providing pond-tastic inspiration to get gardeners started:

  • Enjoy the fabulous Big or Small, Ponds for All booklet - a step-by-step guide to creating the perfect pond, large or small! Download the booklet at www.wildaboutgardens.org.uk
  • Every pond counts! RHS wants to know about every new pond! Each pond contributes towards the network of wild places that nature needs to survive. Please put ponds on the map at www.wildaboutgardens.org.uk
  • Join in a Thursday pond social! This will run from the 17 April to the 27 June at 6:00pm every Thursday on social media helping people identify things in their pond and creating conversation. Join in the conversation on Twitter, the Wildlife Trusts website www.wildlifetrusts.org or www.facebook.com/groups/WildAboutGardens
  • Download Jules Howard’s pond podcast! Jules will be interviewing ecologists and talking ponds for 8 weeks from April 18 onwards. Download the podcast from www.juleshoward.co.uk
  • Download a free pond toolkit and find more inspiration for making your garden a wildlife haven at www.wildaboutgardens.org.uk. See our events page for wetland or wildlife gardening events. Subscribe to the Wild About Gardens e-newsletter for updates and wonderful wildlife gardening ideas!

 *13% of freshwater and wetland species are threatened with extinction from Great Britain. See State of Nature Report 2016 for full details HERE.