Fairy Houses and Fairy Gardens - Only Passionate Curiosity (2024)

Building something in a natural setting using natural materials is an excellent way to encourage your children to spend time outside, which is the best way to help them learn to appreciate the natural world. There is something irresistible about these eco-friendly creations. Enjoy these and other ideas from Oak Meadow’s Living Education Journal!

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We’ve been in our new home for almost two months now – it’s been a rough adjustment, but it’s time to start making this house feel like home. Moving is rough for us because it throws us off our routine — it’s so easy to feel lost and unbalanced whennothing feels familiar.

You may be wondering what fairy houses have to do with routines and feeling at home . . . but it’s more than you think. One of the things I love most about Oak Meadow is the focus on nature, routine, and the rhythm of the year. The early year curriculum suggests setting up a nature table (or something similar) with items from nature to celebrate the current season.

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We need something to help us feel at home and grounded here in Nebraska — and a fall fairy garden seemed to have just the right amount of magic to make that happen.

Fairy houses and gardens are pretty simple to create. You can make them using only items collected from nature, or, if you’re like us and your house is in a constant state of construction and going outside isn’t really an option this second . . . well, then you can combine store bought materials with items from nature and put it together on your kitchen table. Whatever floats your boat!

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Fairy Houses

Fairy houses (also called woodland dwellings) are a beautiful, enchanting way to explore and enjoy nature. They use natural, found objects and can be as simple or as complex as you like.

Here are a few tips to get you started.

Choose a quiet place outside to build your fairy house. Among the roots of a big tree or beside a rock works very well.

Search the surrounding area for natural objects to use as building materials. This helps your fairy house blend into the setting naturally (and makes it seem even more special and magical—it’s easy to imagine a little fairy or creature moving in!).

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Suggested materials: twigs, leaves, stones, pinecones, shells, feathers, nuts, and bark.

Building in different seasons will provide different materials to use. Try not to disturb growing plants: gather your supplies from what has fallen to the ground.

Begin with a basic structure, such as a teepee shape or log cabin design. Add walls and roof, leaving room for a door and maybe a window. Decorate in whatever way you are inspired.

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Consider adding a walkway, a fence, or other features.

Make several other fairy houses nearby for a whole neighborhood!

Fairy Gardens

Fairy gardens are wonder-filled tiny gardens that seem to be a world of their own. Often placed in birdbaths or large pots, fairy-sized features are paired with a variety of small plants, mosses, and herbs. Twig archways, pebble paths, miniature fencing, whittled benches or even a cottage can be tucked under and between the plants. If you have enough space, you can incorporate a small hill or dirt mound in your design. Let your imagination go and see what happens!

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Here are some helpful tips on designing and constructing your fairy garden:

Choose a large sturdy container with good drainage that can be placed where it can be easily seen and enjoyed.

Fill your container with potting soil and then sketch your garden design in the dirt with a stick. (It might help to do this on paper first, deciding what will go where.)

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Tuck your plants securely into the soil, making sure to give them enough room to put down roots and reach for the sun.

Add fairy furniture, pebble paths, leaf umbrellas. If you make a fairy house out of twigs, bark, or stone (or a combination of materials), you might make it three sided with the front left open, inviting fairies inside.

Check out the Fall 2017 Living Education Journal for more wonderful ideas from Oak Meadow

Do you use Oak Meadow? Make sure you check out Homeschool with Heart, our newest support program just for Oak Meadow Homeschoolers.

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Fairy Houses and Fairy Gardens - Only Passionate Curiosity (2024)

FAQs

What is the story behind fairy gardens? ›

It is believed that fairies are the original, magically powerful inhabitants of the British Isles that were driven underground by warring invaders. By creating a fairy garden, you can open a passageway for fairies to join the human world, bringing with them their magical powers and often a bit of mischief as well.

What does a fairy garden symbolize? ›

In literature and art, garden fairies serve as powerful symbols of innocence, wonder, and the magic of the natural world. Their presence in stories and paintings often evokes a sense of nostalgia for childhood, when the boundary between reality and imagination was more fluid.

Why do people like fairy gardens? ›

People build these little worlds for a variety of reasons: to pique or sate their curiosity, that of others, to bring the inside in, to play in a garden year round, to entertain children, and many more reasons.

Are fairy gardens for adults? ›

A fairy garden is a versatile and inclusive hobby. They can be enjoyed by people of all ages who have a love for nature and a sense of wonder. All in all, It is particularly popular among children and adults who enjoy gardening, crafting, and fantasy.

What is the purpose of fairy houses? ›

Fairy Houses are small structures for fairies and woodland creatures to live in. These whimsical habitats are built by children, families, gardeners and nature lovers alike.

What are the rules for fairy gardens? ›

RULES OF THUMB
  • Don't use iron or nickel in the fairy garden as they will repel your fairies.
  • Fairies appreciate when you recycle, compost and garden organically.
  • Perfect playmates for fairies are fireflies, ladybugs and butterflies.
  • Fairies have an affection for honey, sugar and sweet cakes.

Which two things do most fairy gardens have? ›

“The basic elements of a fairy garden are miniature plants, fairies and their friends [like dogs, cats and ducks] and accessories,” says Bawden-Davis. “Accessories run the gamut, from tiny watering pails to little rakes and hoes to birdbaths, benches, gazebos and gazing globes.

What is the quote about fairies garden? ›

Douglas Adams Quotes

Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?

What are fairies a symbol of? ›

Fairies in these myths may be of the more cartoonish variety and signify simply love, magic and springtime, but most signify things like death, sexual depravity, abduction and general immorality. This exhibition looks at representation of fairies within art of many different mediums and time periods.

Are fairy gardens good luck? ›

In fact, fairy gardens are part of medieval folklore, considered to bring blessings and good fortune. Indoors or out, miniature landscapes with cottages, waterfalls and pathways, inhabited by charming fairies and other little people, can be enchanting.

Are fairy gardens still popular? ›

Fairy gardens were once the exciting new trend, but other miniature garden landscape opportunities are on the rise. Fairy gardens are still No. 1, but themed miniature landscapes not specific to fairies are sharing the spotlight.

What to put in the bottom of a fairy garden? ›

Many fairy gardens use planters, terra cotta pots, or galvanized buckets as their base, but anything that holds dirt will do. (Preferably it would be something with drainage holes in the bottom, to prevent your plants from getting waterlogged.)

What is the real story behind fairies? ›

Various folk theories about the origins of fairies include casting them as either demoted angels or demons in a Christian tradition, as deities in Pagan belief systems, as spirits of the dead, as prehistoric precursors to humans, or as spirits of nature.

What is the myth behind fairy circles? ›

Myths and stories about fairy rings

In English and Celtic folklore, fairy rings were caused by fairies or elves dancing in a circle. It was said that if humans joined in the dance they would be punished by the fairies, and made to dance in the ring until they passed out from exhaustion.

What is the history of the fairy house? ›

Fairy houses have been recorded on Monhegan Island in Maine since the 1950s, although some claim they date back to the early 20th century. These houses were primarily made by local children. In the early 2000s, New Hampshire writer Tracy Kane began publishing children's books on fairy houses after visiting Monhegan.

What are the stories about fairy circles? ›

Dutch folklore tells that fairy rings were created by the devil. In Germany, fairy rings were called 'witches rings'. Scandinavian folklore tells stories of tiny spirits inhabiting the rings. In Russia and Switzerland, fairy rings marked hidden treasure that could only be found with the help of fairies or witches.

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