Planting A Fairy Garden

91

By relache

Grape hyacinth and bleeding hearts are two plants from my own garden that faeries like.
Grape hyacinth and bleeding hearts are two plants from my own garden that faeries like.
Source: photo by Relache

Faeries Welcome!

One of the things to keep in mind when creating a fairy garden is that you are creating a total environment. Variety is important. You want plants that provide fragrance, that offer food sources such as fruits and berries, and you want a wide range of blossoms across as many seasons as is possible for your climate. You also want some sort of water source or water feature, both to balance the elements and to provide water for birds and other creatures.

The garden should be as organic as you can make it so that the space is as healthy as possible for plants, animals and humans. Critters and insects are a natural and important part of gardens, even if their actions sometimes seem to run counter to the gardener’s efforts. A woman I heard lecture on fairy gardens at Westercon 56 said that messiness is important to provide private spaces for faery folk in your garden. She said you can even put little houses or boxes in your yard as fairy homes. Be sure not to add too many, as you don’t want it to be too crowded. How you garden can also effect what sort of a fairies you attract. Formal gardens with manicured paths and beds will attract more formal and noble fey folk than slightly-overgrown patches and funky step-stones.


The Fey Folk

Enchanted Fairy Garden Kit
Amazon Price: $16.82
List Price: $25.99
Moonrays 91332 Solar Power Highlighted Fairy with Sunflowers
Amazon Price: $35.98
The Fairy Triad
Amazon Price: $15.64
List Price: $24.99

Sowing the Seeds

All faeries love thick growths of flowering plants. Flowers that have bell-shaped blossoms are often ones associated with faeries. Bluebells, foxglove, snapdragons, roses, holly and ivy are all plants favored by fairies. Planting beds of herbs can also suit fairies. Lavender is a good choice, as it has a lovely fragrance and flowers purple. Mallow has a tendency to attract birds and butterflies. Often flowering vines and plants that trail can be grown well in pots.

Various insects are viewed as totems in various cultures, and you might wish to plant to attract bugs or butterflies that are significant in your spiritual practice. Mexican beliefs see monarch butterflies as the souls of the dead. Celtic spirituality assigns the same significance to white moths. The Aztecs saw the hummingbird as souls of warriors. Ladybugs, praying mantids, spiders, dragonflies, ants and bees are all part of healthy garden systems.


Wild fairies seen when I was at a summer solstice gathering...
Wild fairies seen when I was at a summer solstice gathering...
Source: photo by Relache

Fairy Garden Blogs

  • fairy garden | Flickr - Photo Sharing!

    <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/vneroni/7284079720/" title="fairy garden by vivianneroni, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7239/7284079720_3674240d5a.jpg" width="377" height="500" alt="fairy garden"></a> ...

  • fairy garden 2 | Flickr - Photo Sharing!

    <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/vneroni/7284078826/" title="fairy garden 2 by vivianneroni, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7093/7284078826_a0070fc19c.jpg" width="500" height="356" alt="fairy garden 2"></a> ...

  • COZY LITTLE HOUSE: Helping Children Make Fairy Gardens

    Your grandson's fairy garden turned out great! I like that you turned this fun activity into a teachable moment. I have found that children love gardening, and love spending time with adults. You found a fun way to educate him ...

Fairy Doors

Garden Gnome Home Door in a Tree Art Pieces Outdoor Yard Decor
Amazon Price: $19.99
List Price: $0.00
"Do Not Disturb" Fairy Statuary with Solar Light
Amazon Price: $18.75
List Price: $31.68

Fairy Circles

Having trees, fruiting or greenery, are also an important part of a faery garden. Driads, also spelled dryads, are spirits believed to reside in trees. To encourage wilder fairy folk to come live in your garden you will want to plant some willows. Fairy circles is the name traditionally given to plantings of trees, natural or gardened, that form a circle. Many Wiccans and Pagans view these tree circles as potent spaces of fairy energy. Oaks, cedars and pines are popular choices when gardeners are purposely planting to form a fairy circle. Try to never carry iron, especially iron knives, into spaces that are inhabited with faery folk. Some fairies are negatively effected by iron and many people have reported suddenly losing iron blades in the vicinity of fairy tree circles.

I made a clay fairy house and added some fairies that followed me home from the thrift store.
I made a clay fairy house and added some fairies that followed me home from the thrift store.
Source: photo by Relache

Planting with the Garden Fairy

Comments

flashmakeit profile image

flashmakeit Level 5 Commenter 11 days ago

I enjoyed your hub and you made the darling little fairy house!!

workwithnature profile image

workwithnature Level 1 Commenter 4 months ago

That was entertaining, Thanks for the interesting hub. I for one really have seen a fairy, hear in Ireland. Or something of that description :)

snakeslane profile image

snakeslane Level 7 Commenter 4 months ago

Sweet hub Relache, your own garden photo (grape hyacinth and bleeding heart) is lovely. Regards, s lane

islandnurse profile image

islandnurse Level 1 Commenter 6 months ago

I have always provided my children with their own little gardens, and my daughter created a fairy one on her own, complete with a little fairy door purchased at a craft sale... Great hub!

Fluffy77 profile image

Fluffy77 15 months ago

Thank you for the advise, I hope one day to have a fairy garden myself. This is a very useful and lovely Hub.

Kim Lynn profile image

Kim Lynn 18 months ago

Enjoyed hub. Thanks!

PegCole17 profile image

PegCole17 Level 7 Commenter 18 months ago

Beautifully descriptive. Loved the winged Fairy statue.

CrazyGata profile image

CrazyGata Level 4 Commenter 20 months ago

This did more than tickle my brain and imagination... No wonder I keep trying to sow something out of my patio (not yet garden) FAIRIES!

Deborah Demander profile image

Deborah Demander Level 3 Commenter 22 months ago

I have been growing my garden. Thanks to your hub, I now have more great ideas. Thanks.

Namaste.

John Yeoman profile image

John Yeoman 2 years ago

A brilliantly clever and enchanting idea! As an heirloom plant developer, I've often wanted to start a goblin garden - full of weirdly long beans and beaky tomatoes. But who would dare enter it?

GALAXY 59 profile image

GALAXY 59 Level 1 Commenter 2 years ago

Some very wonderful ideas here, a great hub. I am going to set aside a part of my garden and start creating my own little fairy patch.

Karen Ellis profile image

Karen Ellis Level 1 Commenter 4 years ago

Very nice. I was considering writing a hub on growing a Fairy Garden, but you have done a great job here.

gabriella05 profile image

gabriella05 4 years ago

Great hub I have 2 angel in my garden they represent the 2 baby that I lost I named them Salvatore and Emanuele

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