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Wildlife (4)
Gardeners' musings (2)
Plants (2)

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Kate Bradbury (8)

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Building bird boxes

By Kate Bradbury on 14/12/2012 17:16:42

For Christmas this year, all my friends and relatives will be receiving bird boxes. I’ve developed something of an obsession with DIY bird boxes, and currently have a pile of them in my front room, waiting to be wrapped in festive paper. I feel like


Gardening for bumblebees

By Kate Bradbury on 14/01/2011 15:19:00

or beneath sheds, while the common carder generally chooses thickets of long grass or compost heaps to nest in. But bumblebees will nest anywhere they deem 'suitable', including bird boxes, lawnmowers, concrete paths and old duvets.I’ve yet to encourage


Gardening for bats

By Kate Bradbury on 22/07/2011 16:56:22

It's easy to consider bees and birds when gardening – we see plenty of them if we grow the right plants – but what about bats? Emerging from their roosts at dusk and returning by dawn, they can often go unnoticed.My partner is a huge fan of bats


Plants for bees

By Kate Bradbury on 30/04/2010 14:42:05

, such as clover. Many pesticides just kill them.Our gardens are fast becoming refuges for bees - especially some species of bumblebee, which are happy to nest in wild corners, bird boxes and under sheds. Many also come into our gardens to feed. Sadly some species


Rats in the garden

By Kate Bradbury on 10/12/2010 16:08:44

With all this talk of feeding the birds lately, it would be wrong not to mention the potential unhappy consequence of such a good deed: rats.Rats are everywhere, and some say there is one rat for every human in the UK. They used to spread the plague


Sowing seeds for a new garden

By Kate Bradbury on 31/12/2009 15:00:11

clumps of this and that from my mum, who is very understanding of having her established perennials lifted out of the ground and brutally divided with a spade. My bird boxes and feeders have been up for a while, but there’s been no sign of any birds


The gardening bug

By Kate Bradbury on 24/06/2011 17:07:06

with the garden wildlife, or at least I liked to think so. I remember my dad waiting for the blue tits to leave the nest box so he could quickly lift me up and show me the baby birds inside. Once, aged two, I found a worm that had been pecked at by a bird, so I


Bumblebees and wax moth

By Kate Bradbury on 01/07/2011 12:11:26

(apart from the human, of course). In the south of the UK it's estimated that around 80% of bumblebee nests in gardens are predated by wax moth* - perhaps because nests under sheds, in compost bins and bird boxes are easier to find than those hidden


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