If wildness can exist even when there is a degree of human intervention, then gardens too can, to some degree, be wild. ie gardens can be cultivated in such as way as to create or support areas of wildness. These could be corners that are left to run wild, or lawns managed as meadows (although they are likely to be cut by hand rather than by grazing animals). But even when gardens are more formally cultivated they can still support wildlife with flowering plants that benefit pollinators, log piles that benefit insects and beetles, ponds that benefit frogs and dragonflies, and in the absence of pesticides, aphids and caterpillars that benefit birds.