Get it right and flowery and romantic can be yours. However, get it wrong, and your neighbours will start asking you how you’re feeling, as they’ve noticed you haven’t been able to cut the lawn?!
Of course, you can cheat, or be clever, which ever way you look at it, and start with a wildflower mat. This is a special turf, laid out, watered and off you go. But where’s the fun in that? We thought this pretty wildflower meadow we came across in Chichester last year may have been grown in this way.
2. Watch and Wait: In the first year let a patch of land designated for a wildflower garden grow without cutting and see what happens.
3. Harvest Seeds: At the end of the season, harvest seeds from the wildflowers you like. If you have yellow rattle collect as much seed as you can. The yellow rattle plant is your friend because it crowds out the unwanted meadow grasses. The bottom line is ultimately you want to:
Which is where you step in and give nature a helping hand. Either by yanking out those plants you deem less worthy, or the most polite way, to encourage the rattle keep at bay the unwanted competitive grasses.
A lot of people want field poppies, for instance, Poppies look fantastic but need disturbed soil, so probably no good just tossing out the poppy seeds.