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Hen-Gen said:No opinions on what you should do with the poly tunnel but I love the sound of your field. Sounds like a wildlife paradise. Is it a closed canopy or do you have lots of woodland flower too?
Well, it started out as a sort of take on ancient "sacred groves". I mean, it's very small, for what he planted, maybe about 1/4 acre!)The hornbeam hedge is in a big circle around the area. As it's slightly to one side of our property, on the side bordering our neighbour, the dividing hedge has now merged with the hornbeams, willow, bramble & elder on that side, so now, it's maybe 6 or 7 feet thick on that side! If you bend down and look under the trees, you can see sort of clear lanes, where foxes, and who knows what, obviously use it as a highway. He used to have some flowerbeds out there too, but as he became ill, he couldn't keep them, and with caring for him for years, and since he died, I've been running in and out, caring for mum, so I couldn't keep them either, so they are now totally overgrown. But I do have intentions! Some day, it will get sorted.
There is a couple of areas where clump of daffodils come up and a couple of clumps of meadowsweet. But there's a lot of grass, that needs to be mowed regularly, too! I cut the hornbeam hedge a few years ago, which was, I think, a mistake, because I haven't seen any bats here since!
Out in the front garden, there's a clump of hazel in a corner, but I do need to cut those down regularly. Of course, they then come back thicker than ever! There are God knows how many apple trees, pear trees, cherry trees and a plum. I've never got to the cherries though. The birds eat them before they get ripe. And down at the far back, on our boundary, there's a mixed hedge of sweet chestnut, hawthorn, and some other stuff. It sounds like the place is huge. It's not. It's 7/10 of an acre! My husband packed a lot on to it! He also, down at the back boundary, as he cut branches and bits off trees, just laid them down in a sort of deep ditch at the boundary, and over time, weeds, nettles and grass have grown through the branches, and it gives a lot of shelter to little critters.