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Most loved plants

By Kate Bradbury on 11/02/2010 16:40:34

that actually, everything's alright with the world. I also love watching bumblebees foraging in cranesbill geraniums, viper's bugloss and the mountain cornflower, Centaurea montana.And in the office? The response wasn't as great - or as heated - as when I asked


Cuckoo spit

By Kate Bradbury on 04/06/2010 16:04:49

tiny) garden.The garden isn't perfect and I've a long way to go, but I've documented my success by the variety of garden visitors I've gained since the transformation: blue tits and great tits, bumblebees, butterflies, moths, slugs, snails and leaf


Wilding the Chelsea Flower Show

By Kate Bradbury on 23/05/2011 15:20:50

couple of ducks were found in Ann Marie Powell's British Heart Foundation Garden and a frog was sat in the stream of the SKYShades Garden. When I arrived on Sunday, everything was buzzing with the sound of honey and bumblebees foraging on the variety


Goldcrest encounter

By Kate Bradbury on 21/12/2012 15:05:39

bumblebee had been found at a London sewage works. It’s all very lovely, but I can’t help feeling that the setting of such events should be a little more romantic. The goldcrest was one of several moving through the shrubbery one Thursday rush-hour morning


Sowing seeds for a new garden

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

(apart from a friendly pigeon), and I doubt there will be until I have grown sufficient foliage (and bought the all-important plum tree) for them to hide in. And it’s going to be a butterfly and bumblebee haven – full of single-flowered, nectar rich


Draining ponds

By Kate Bradbury on 09/04/2010 14:13:11

There's a park near me. It's a great place to escape the urban sprawl. There, I've spotted eight species of bumblebee (including a winter buff-tailed colony), plus honey, solitary and feather-footed bees. I've also seen butterflies, great spotted


Chelsea 2010: my verdict

By Kate Bradbury on 25/05/2010 13:26:36

that work well in a formal planting scheme. The bed of French lavender at the front of the garden was abuzz with honeybees, while the early bumblebee, Bombus pratorum, gorged on cirsium at the rear. Other plants worthy of note included Centaurea montana


Saving foxglove seeds

By Kate Bradbury on 02/07/2010 17:01:47

lifted, sorted and freecycled, I reminded myself of the end goal: a beautiful garden where my foxglove could flower, set seed and make baby foxgloves. I imagined a sea of digitalis in years to come, alive with the sound of unseen bumblebees delving deep


My gardening year

By Kate Bradbury on 23/12/2010 12:16:02

imported topsoil, then tried (and failed) to sow a lawn from seed.I watched the evolution of the plot from courtyard to garden as more and more creatures visited it - blue tits and great tits, a robin, blackbird, bumblebees, butterflies, moths, slugs


Argentinian wildlife garden

By Kate Bradbury on 26/04/2013 14:37:19

southern lapwings (Vanellus chilensis) known affectionately as 'terro terro', due to their call. I was in my element counting and photographing different types of bumblebee and solitary wasp, and later was joined in the swimming pool by a couple of toads


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