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Japanese knotweed

By Richard Jones on 19/08/2009 11:07:22

on the broad leaves, Fallopia is more or less sterile when it comes to wildlife. But this may be about to change. I notice that there are rumours of importing a small but pretty Japanese insect, the psyllid bug Aphalara idatori, to try and control the knotweed


Free range chickens

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/01/2008 11:29:00

around your garden grazing on aphids and slugs. If you let full-sized hens into your borders then they will kick soil all over the shop and peck large holes in the emerging shoots of your most precious plants. Bantams are less destructive, but if the main


Bug hunt and rosemary leaf beetle

By Richard Jones on 20/05/2008 13:14:00

and inquisitive children, eager to find out all about the wildlife they have found and held in their own hands. Their eyesight is so good, and they're all immensely proud of the often tiny specks of protoplasm which would be passed over in a blink by their parents


Ladybird pupae

By Pippa Greenwood on 23/07/2009 15:03:35

they are the gardeners' friend, as both the larvae and the adult eat aphids. But the immobile, almost tick-like pupae, with no legs or head end visible, often go un-noticed. Even if they are noticed, they often escape recognition.But this year it seems just about


Wasps

By Richard Jones on 30/09/2009 09:41:55

. They are in desperate need of some good PR. Having spent the last four or five months diligently, but rather secretively, helping the gardener by eating caterpillars, aphids, flies and other insects, now is the time they start making a nuisance of themselves around


The greater bulb fly

By Richard Jones on 26/05/2010 11:52:22

. It is not one of those gardener-friendly hoverflies lauded for its voracious aphid-hunting larvae. Instead, its large glutinous maggots chew away at the insides of daffodil bulbs; at best leaving a large open wound in the damaged and weakened bulb, at worst


Wasps

By Richard Jones on 11/05/2011 08:04:48

the small golfball-sized embryo nest with its 15-20 cells in a single paper comb. After she has laid her first 15-20 eggs in these, she must forage for caterpillars, flies, aphids and other insects to feed to the grubs that hatch.This is a vulnerable time


Ladybirds

By Kate Bradbury on 17/06/2011 15:32:12

After last week's excitement about the ladybird party on the BBC allotment, I was delighted to learn that the UK Ladybird Survey had a stand at this year’s Gardeners' World Live.There’s always a few wildlife charities at the show and each year I


Compost heaps and wildlife

By Kate Bradbury on 25/08/2011 16:32:12

in the waste below.It's remarkable how much life a compost bin can attract. Books will tell you that a compost heap is one of the best garden features to attract wildlife but, somehow, this 'life' inside the bin can go unnoticed.We gardeners normally only


Wildlife-friendly plants

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:40:38

Nectar BarAt Berryfields, we have made what we called the Nectar Bar alongside our big pond. Butterflies are among the more beautiful visitors we hope to attract, but all nectar-drinking creatures are welcome here.Any garden created for wildlife


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