







Every Hobbit Hole is different. Yours won’t be exactly like this one but here’s how we built ours.
You will need:
1. First, grow some lush green grass in a tray.
2. Fill a tray or a large terracotta saucer with potting mix and position your terracotta pot on top. Allow plenty of space in front of the pot opening to make your garden (see pictures). Use potting mix to lift it at the back so that the opening is at right angles to the tray. Then mound some more potting mix around the sides.
3. Holding the edges of the tea towel,lift your grass from its tray and get help to cut it to size so that it lies nicely over the pot and mound.
4. Now it’s time to decorate! We picked creeping thyme from the garden to cover the edge above the door. You could also use moss or left over bits of the grass you grew. We used sticks to decorate around the doorway and for a little fence. The best flowers to use are little ones. Daisies and dandelions are ideal!
5. For the door we used thick corrugated cardboard. Measure the inside of your terracotta pot and cut a circle to fit neatly inside it. Paint your door and add a handle (we used a button, which we wired on with a twisty tie, but you could paint it on instead).
6. A twig from a small leafed shrub makes a mini tree and flat pebbles or sand make a pathway.
Here’s an idea - get all your friends to make Hobbit Holes then put them all together to make a mini Hobbiton!
1. Line your tray with a piece of fabric, such as an old tea towel. This will make it easy to lift your grass out of the tray when you are ready to make your hobbit house.
2. Fill the tray with Black Magic seed raising mix.
3. Put your tray in a sink with a few cm of water and let the potting mix soak it up from the bottom, or water gently using a watering can. Leave it to drain for 10 minutes.
4. Sow your lawn seed quite thickly.
5. Now you need to be patient. Keep the seed raising mix evenly moist as your grass grows.
6. When it reaches 5-6cm tall, give it a hair cut. This will make it grow thicker. About three weeks after sowing you should have a nice thick carpet of grass to make your hobbit hole.
Keep your Hobbit house in a shady place away from wind and hot sun. Use a mist spray bottle to keep the grass watered. If you're a keen gardening Hobbit you can keep your garden looking good by picking new flowers to replace any that wilt.
It isn’t just Hobbit houses that have grass roofs. More and more people are interested in building ‘eco-friendly’ houses with ‘green’ roofs that are covered in plants. A green roof keeps a house cool in summer and warm in winter so it is very energy efficient. A green roof also absorbs rain, which is a good thing because it helps prevent floods and water pollution.