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Hang onto old tree branches and shrub press clipping and produce a drained hedge or hedgerow . It ’s both a scummy - toll privacy roadblock plus habitat and nutriment for unnumbered beast .
There are more idea forcreating privacy fencehere .

The Benefits and Beauty of Decay
One of the most important thing I have see about nature is this : there is as much value in decay thing as there is in live things . One chip in life , the other is life .
Bam .
If we need our garden to support nature — and work with it , not against it — it is vital to garden organically , free of all the -cides that vote out plants and critters , and appropriate dead and decompose things to stay in plaza wherever possible . That ’s the bountifulness that prolong everything .

Bothfallen leavesand former tree branches give so much to a garden . They cater habitat year - pear-shaped , feed the dotty things with all the bugs and microbials that join in the decay process , and protect and enrich soil along the way .
This project shows how I keep sometime branches in my garden . In the days I ’ve been doing this , it has testify a vital imagination for all sorts of beast and preferred roosting situation for the fowl .
It ’s essentially a hedge made from fall branches and pruned opus with all the benefits of beat and decaying organic materials .

Make a Tree Branch Crib
This is one of those projects that does n’t have a real name so I made it up : branch pony . It ’s a removed cousin of a corn crib with the functionality of abug hotel .
You might also see version calleddead hedgerowsorbranch bulwark .
Some gardener target the branches horizontally . I went with vertical for additional seclusion .

For me , the greatest measure of successful horticulture is not complete borders or weed - devoid beds — a once - a - year special event — orthe awe-inspiring garden artistry , but the life it supports .
The goal with this projection is to create a habitat that sustains living things in an artful way .
In addition to keeping compost ( easy compost guide here ) andsaving fallen leavesand yard waste ( let everything do decompose and replenish the earth ) , I also save hang and dress branches and twig in a pile at the back of the garden .

It ’s quite astonishing how attractive the branch pile is to wild thing . All day long , birds drop by to junket on insects , and garner branchlet and wheat for nest - building . And that ’s just one representative .
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reckon nigher , there are nooks and crannies for infinite insects to lay eggs , nest , and rest , rapier in for the winter , while the whole lot gradually decompose and returns itself to the terra firma .

It ’s the original bug hotel . In other words , it ’s nature doing its matter .
UPDATE : I’ve been asked a few times if any four - legged mammal prove to live in the trot . Nope ! My quondam arm pile was sure attractive to them , but not as a den . It may be because of the direction the outgrowth are standing up : there is no room to get into the crib and definitely nowhere to lie down . That say , it ’s entirely possible some mammal may rest in their one day . In the meanspirited clip , it ’s a favored roosting and dining touch for an mixed bag of dame .
A Simple Building Project
The original tree subdivision pile / yard waste dumping geographical zone was quite an eyesore :
I decided to build a structure to apply the branch while they break down . It would also act as a CRT screen to jam off my gnarly — but much loved — cubic yard barren region from the rest period of the garden .
I started with some remnant wood from my storage shed , determined to apply supply on hand and not to spend a dime on the project .

You ’ll notice in this next photo that there ’s some peak planter in the area . I had randomly stashed them there for a next project but , they were so heavy to move , I stop up build around them . I ’ve only got so much staying power !
The Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree branch cot is 12 - feet long by four - foot deep and about 6 - feet tall . Again , I just used some leftover 4×4 post , and various opus of barnboard ( formerly part of a raised garden bed ) .
My main business concern was make the whole social organisation self - supporting , so it could hold the weight of the branches and not fellate over in the wind . We get some screwball winds here .

As you could see from the next photos , it ’s a simple structure and does exactly what I hoped .
The Completed Crib
Here it is with all the limb in , plus some garden nontextual matter .
Do you recognize the giant spoon and fork ? I think of seeing them in home base when I was a kid . I got them at the thrift shop for $ 1 .
I like how they contribute to my theme of over - sized garden prowess including thesegiant DIY coneflowersand thegiant bird ’s nest on the roof of my shed .

The random planters are puddle a retort : there ’s some genus Dianthus , fresh pea , andstrawberry plantsrescued from other parts of the garden . Next summertime I ’ll work up the energy to move everything around again and create a upright display , but for now this is fine .
Most importantly , the birds are fuck the branch crib . They are in there all the time , devouring insects and pick up material . I also see doves sleeping in there .
We ’ve had a few big wind storms and the crib has stayed steady so I ’m calling this one a achiever . I jazz how it nominate a creative display of the branches while letting them know out their glorious days of decomposition .
Resources
Ebook
Naturally CraftyCreative Garden Ideas
by Melissa J. Will
Make nerveless stuff with natural materials from and for your garden .
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This ebook is a digital file cabinet ( PDF format ) you keep to your gimmick . It is not a physical intersection .
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~Melissathe Empress of Dirt ♛