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Go Wild - a celebration of UK biodiversity, 24 May - 28 September 2003 Festival Features
Festival Diary
Interactive Tour
Wild Facts
Wild Science
Wild Images
About Go Wild

Please note:

The Go Wild Festival ran at Kew and Wakehurst place for the summer of 2003. As such many of the festival features can no longer be seen in the gardens, but this website has been kept to give visitors access to wealth of information developed to support the festival.

Don't forget to check out the latest events in the gardens. Find out more......

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Learn more about garden design

   

Wild Ideas - welcoming wildlife into the garden

Six small gardens designed by Kew’s final year Diploma students based on UK Biodiversity themes

On throughout the festival

The gardens have been generously supported by SITA Environmental Trust.

Six showcase gardens illustrate different approaches to using the UK’s native plants in a small garden plot. The gardens are designed by Kew final year Diploma students, who have been inspired by a diverse range of habitats and landscapes, including disused railways as corridors for wildlife, the native silver birch and the beauty of the Somerset Levels. Each demonstrate ideas for you to use at home and is designed to encourage a greater understanding of biodiversity in the average domestic garden.


Railway Reclaimed by Bob McMeekin

Loss of habitat constitutes the greatest treat to the existence of UK plants and animals. Another major threat is the biological invasion of alien plant species. Not all non-native species are invasive and harmful, but many can take over and change long established ecosystems.

Disused railways are quickly reclaimed by nature, and unless they are managed as wildlife corridors, there is the danger that non-native, invasive species can create monocultures and spread rapidly. Careful management of such areas is important, because they form natural passageways or corridors for wildlife, helping animals to navigate though an increasingly fragmented landscape of urban and agricultural development. This garden is planted with both native and invader species and visitors are invited to test their knowledge of each.

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On Reflection by Fumiko Ishizuna

The Somerset Levels is one of the famous and unique landscapes within the UK. Originally reclaimed from the sea, the area is now important for agriculture. On Reflection is a contemporary interpretation of a ditch in the Somerset Levels, where the reclaimed land provides a haven for wildlife. The garden design picks out the main elements of the landscape, emphasising the reflection of sunlight on the water, using mirrors and metal strips. These are formed into modified grass leaves, magnifying movement and sunlight within a small space. A woven wire nest represents that of the reed warbler finding security within the reeds.

The plant species chosen are all UK natives, planted en mass, with the mirror maximising the space and simplicity of the design. These plants species look attractive in a garden setting but their beauty can be more appreciated in the natural habitat, which is now increasingly under threat from development.

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The Lady of the Woods by John Evans

The silver birch, called The Lady of the Woods by Samuel Coleridge, one of Britain’s greatest poets, is an ancient UK native, a pioneer. In Celtic mythology it represents the emergence of spring. In biodiversity terms, this single plant species provides food and shelter for over 230 insects, which in turn attract animals. A charcoal kiln, long associated with coppiced birch woodlands, is included in the garden design.

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Diverse-city by Andrew Luke

Held within the confines of the garden boundary lies a rich green oasis of diversity, creating a much needed buffer zone from urban pollution and lifestyle. This design uses native plants, often forgotten or discarded as weeds. The beauty of the individual native plants is enhanced by the number of different species growing together within a small space.

All of the plant material used is native to the UK and the natural habitat of many of the species chosen is under threat from human activities. The garden is designed to be relatively low maintenance to give a natural wild look, whilst attracting many animal species into the garden. The coppice provides an area to walk through while relaxing.

The garden is built to show that many of the UK flora species are well worth growing in the garden, but the emphasis should be on preserving their natural habitat for future generations to enjoy. The British hedgerow provides a home for plant and animal species, and often supports more species than many woodlands.

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Plant Zoo by Mark Ward

Plant Zoo highlights the need for conservation of UK flora, focussing upon the plight of native aquatic and waterside plants. The design aims to be a provocative contemporary interpretation of a British waterside habitat, intended to make viewers consider their own ecological and conservation attitudes.

By producing a stark industrial landscape, all physical contact with plants in this design has been removed. This design gives an insight into how plants may be viewed in years to come from behind bars in a Plant Zoo.

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Road to Nowhere by Rossana Porta

This garden depicts a natural recovery from a derelict urban area, with native plants thrusting up through the tarmac to reclaim the space. Humans may wipe out species – even themselves - but plants will always find a way to survive. Nature will always return to areas man has finished spoiling, reclaiming them for their rightful occupiers.

More info >>>

See also:

Learn more about garden design

External Links:

SITA Environmental Trust

 
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What is biodiversity?
What is a native plant?
Links

 
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