Ireland’s nature heroes: Garden size doesn’t matter - you can do a lot with a little
A LOT OF people believe, understandably, that if they live in a town or city and only have a small garden, a balcony, or a few pots on a windowsill, then they can’t meaningfully help Ireland reverse its biodiversity crisis. It’s an understandable assumption.
When we picture “saving nature”, we tend to imagine sweeping landscapes, vast woodlands, restored bogs, or large farms shifting to more wildlife-friendly approaches.
But here’s something we don’t talk about enough: you absolutely can make a difference, no matter how small your patch of the world is. In fact, the collective impact of thousands of small gardens, balconies, and pockets of green is arguably one of the most powerful — and most overlooked — nature restoration tools we have.
Because when it comes to biodiversity, size doesn’t matter nearly as much as connection.
There are over two million gardens in Ireland amounting to nearly 360,000 acres. That would make Ireland’s largest national park. Yes, farmers and the government are the largest individual landowners, but everyone with some outdoor space can make a collective impact.
Ireland’s wildlife faces the same problem no matter where you look: fragmentation. Our landscapes have been carved into isolated patches of green separated by roads, walls, lawns, concrete, and intensive land use. Animals, insects, and even plants struggle to move, feed, shelter, or find mates when every direction is a barrier.>
https://www.thejournal.ie/readme/how-to-garden-in-small-space-ireland-biodiversity-jack-morley-6902321-Dec2025/Open linkView original on slrpnk.net
it's great to see posts like this in the winter, imo. now's the season to plant bare-root trees (in the ground or containers) & sow wildflower seeds, since they need a frost before they'll sprout 🥳
Right? Also, I like how empowering the whole article sounds. Also, you're the first commenter on the community, so welcome I suppose haha Also also, it's nice to spot an Gaeilgeoir in the wild!
agreed! optimism & helping folks feel informed & empowered is a crucial part of solarpunk that (imo) tends to get neglected a bit in light of Current Events. but there's a lot we can affect locally, so i'm looking forward to seeing folks share resources etc here! :)
edit: gaeilge abú! there was talk of a ciorcal comhrá thread or something at ![email protected] a while back, i just should really take the initiative and make one 😅🫣
Sorry, I'm not fluent myself, I'm trying to learn but it's an complicated affair, especially since I'm relatively new to the country and there doesn't seem to be a lot of places focused on teaching Irish from scratch to adults... However, I have my cupla focal, and am trying to improve!
Absolutely agree! I personally think that this is one of the most important ways of how solarpunk is different than the 'aesthietic genres' in how we are actively trying to figure out how to make the world more solarpunk here and now.
there's a place for aesthetics, imo, since visualising how to make the world a better place is an important step for motivating people & having ideals to strive for. 🙌
my nit-picking starts when it's something like an ai-generated image of trees on a skyscraper, or post-apocalyptic fiction that doesn't even take place on earth or features some non-human species that took over after humans became extinct. 😅🫣
fair play for making the effort to learn! 🥳 if you don't mind online/zoom classes, my pro-tip is to look for places in the north like an droichead, where the courses will only set you back around €60, rather than €220 for courses in dublin.
Absolutely! What I meant is that (for me) solarpunk as a movement is more than just aestietics or even an art genre, for most of the people I know it is equally a philosophy, a goal and to a degree a way of life haha
Call me names if you want, but by now I just mentally dismiss AI-generated stuff by default, I'm so tired of it...
Did you just assume I'm in Dublin lol? (I am literally in the middle of Dublin)
agreed! it's great to always have that focus on both things to strive for, and steps to take in the here & now 💪 and yeah, if ai has no haters, solarpunk is dead 🙂↕️
most irish courses tend to be in dublin or belfast, and i wish i'd known about the cheaper courses in belfast (that i can attend via zoom & not commute) years ago, lol