Dragons in your garden

Shy reptiles have a real sense of the wild about them, but did you know they can be found in many garden settings?

 

Reptiles can be found in many gardens, even in quite urban settings. You are most likely to have common lizards, slow worms or grass snakes, depending on local conditions. In this blog, we will talk about their different requirements and how your garden can be a home fit for these mini-dragons.

In our last garden, in a housing estate in a large town, we often saw lizards as we approached the front door. It was a dry spot, with plenty of hiding places, and a real sun trap. Lizards also frequent our allotment where there are warm spots and cover. If you have lizards, you can provide good habitat with sunny rockeries and log piles. Lizards eat insects and spiders so there also needs to be good habitat for their prey.

Lizard basking on black matting at our allotment - P Brooks

We regularly saw slow worms in our last garden and have a healthy population in our current garden. Slow worms love compost heaps and hiding places such as gaps beneath loose paving. They are the gardener’s friend as their diet includes slugs.

Slow worms enjoy the warmth of the compost heap especially with additional protection from a piece of old carpet - P Brooks

We count ourselves privileged to have grass snakes in our current garden. They need water which is provided by the adjacent River Eden and the ponds in our garden. They particularly love our wildlife pond, as well as somewhere to bask in the sun or to hide in the dense vegetation, which provides a corridor to the wilder conditions of the riverbank. They also like compost heaps. Grass snakes eat amphibians, fish and small mammals. We recently witnessed a small grass snake pursue and catch a tadpole.

Grass snake basking in the vegetation close to our pond - P Brooks

Our 'Wild About Gardens' scheme is offering advice to gardeners in Kent by telephone this year. Enter your garden into the scheme here and our trained Wild About Garden volunteers will do their best to answer your questions. The scheme includes an award, sponsored by Kent Reptile and Amphibian Group (KRAG), for the best dragon garden.

Learn more about wildlife gardening

Three apples in a tree from below.
©️ Gavin Dickson

The benefits & abundance of perennial vegetables & fruit

Blog

Typically, most gardeners and farmers grow annual vegetable crops – those that are sown, planted, and harvested within one growing season. But perennial fruit and vegetables, which grow and produce food for many years, are becoming increasingly popular.…

Summer flowers for a wildlife-friendly garden

Blog

Looking to create a garden that’s not just beautiful but also provides a range of benefits for wildlife, as well as ongoing summer flowers? There’s lots of consider when choosing plants. I’m the Wild About Gardens Officer at Kent Wildlife Trust and these…

Our new Wild About Gardens Officer's top tips

Blog

What does wildlife-friendly gardening mean to our new Wild About Gardens Officer? Ellen Tout shares what inspires her garden, and how we can all make a huge difference for nature right outside our back doors.