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Wildlife (14)

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Richard Jones (14)

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garden birds

Birds: thrushes and fieldfares

By Richard Jones on 20/01/2010 16:31:48

have pointed out, snow does make birds all the more obvious. When I peered out later in the day, the apple tree was bending under the burden of several plump … birds. They were silhouetted against the morning light so not immediately identifiable


Codling moth

By Richard Jones on 14/09/2011 17:47:03

've no idea what variety the apple tree is. It was in the garden when we arrived at our house, 12 years ago, the legacy of a previous owner, whose only other contributions to horticultural delight were chain-link fences and concrete.I do, however, use


Garden birds

By Richard Jones on 13/02/2013 07:09:00

couple of thrushes look curiously at the small gaggle of blue/ great/ long-tailed tits in the apple tree. Four wood pigeons hunch, bored, in the big sycamore tree. I think there’s even a robin perched way off in the distance. I only give it five minutes


Feeding the birds

By Richard Jones on 12/11/2008 10:13:18

the weather here in London.The garden is still looking remarkably green, even after we cut down the now wilting and blackened dahlias. In fact we already have a perfect bird-feeder growing out there - the apple tree. And the bird that best takes advantage


Sparrowhawk overhead

By Richard Jones on 14/10/2009 10:11:46

the garden. It was very low, only just clearing the apple tree. This may have had something to do with the large pigeon it was clutching in its talons. It flew, rather laboriously I thought, down over the gardens to the short row of tall trees that bound


Coal tits

By Richard Jones on 09/11/2011 07:52:26

. Brilliant.There are four of them, and they do the airborne equivalent of scurrying about, spending a few moments examining the rather twisted apple tree and the lichen-coated pear tree, before bouncing down to the feeders and fat balls to practice


Ladybirds

By Richard Jones on 19/11/2008 09:15:16

A bit of garden clearance in the rain is always therapeutic. Working off a good lunch and feeling the drip of water down my neck, I feel my endeavours are all the more noble. Actually all I'm doing is ripping the vine out of the apple tree it's been


Magpies and mice

By Richard Jones on 13/02/2008 09:20:00

there, chattering loudly in the apple tree, was old black and white, cocking its head first one way, then the other.I was really chuffed. Not about having the bird in the garden, but about the boy correctly identifying it. I congratulated him on his


A jay in the garden

By Richard Jones on 22/10/2008 16:26:10

into the apple tree, but only a minute or two later and it was back. It then started to peck around the handrail and the iron mesh. It spent some time clawing its way up and down the metalwork, and was definitely intent on getting at something.Eventually it flew


Jays

By Richard Jones on 18/03/2009 16:02:44

of decking near the apple tree, before ambling noisily off through the branches and away. This was the second time this week they were here. Maybe they're nesting nearby.I hear jays more often than I see them, and their angry scrawking call often echoes


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