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The painted lady

By Richard Jones on 31/08/2007 10:57:49

In the Horniman Museum Gardens earlier today and a brightly coloured butterfly caught my eye as it visited a low dandelion flower. I skulk up to it and discover a painted lady, Cynthia cardui. This is only the third I have seen this year.A native


Late-summer-nectar

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:33:22

Late-summer nectarAs some insects are still out foraging in late-summer, it's a good idea to provide food for them with nectar-rich, late-flowering plants.Plants for beesIn late-summer, many plants have finished flowering, but bees, butterflies


How to make a nectar-rich container display

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 12:01:49

You can create a wildlife corner in eventhe smallest garden, and it doesn't have to be a patch of unmown grass or a scrambling scrub thicket. A single, large container will suffice, containing plants to attract bees, butterflies, hoverflies


Homes for wildlife

By Kate Bradbury on 05/11/2010 16:14:04

sited under a hedge and dutifully packed with fallen leaves and hay.Attracting wildlife to your garden can be a bit hit and miss. Bumblebees and butterflies, for example, will happily come to our gardens to forage for food, but often choose to breed


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


Distinctive angles

By Richard Jones on 06/09/2007 18:09:49

mad turns and wild spirals it landed at breakneck speed in a neighbouring tree.'Butterfly' he announced. The division between butterflies and moths is wholly artificial so I couldn't fault his identification: a beautiful scale-winged creature flying


Leaf miners

By Kate Bradbury on 30/09/2011 17:40:21

Last year I wrote a blog about cuckoo spit, in which I documented the fauna that had appeared in my garden after I had transformed it from a paved courtyard. I celebrated the arrival of butterflies, birds, froghopper nymphs and moths, but was less


Guerrilla gardening and wildlife

By Kate Bradbury on 19/11/2010 16:27:42

it's not legal, but I'm not aware of anyone being prosecuted for it.I attended a wildlife gardening conference recently, where one of the speakers, Jan Miller, author of Gardening for Butterflies, Bees and other benificial insects gave a presentation


10 uses for nettles

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:28:28

wildlife, they can be made into great plant food and are a surprisingly versatile ingredient in the kitchen.The nettle we're used to in the UK is Urtica dioica, a perennial plant full of iron, calcium, magnesium and nitrogen, which makes it incredibly


RSPB Homes for Wildlife

By Richard Jones on 10/12/2008 12:12:12

My father, from whom I get my interest in wildlife, often bemoans the fact that there is nothing left in the countryside these days. He fondly remembers fields awash with butterflies and heavens full of skylarks. But he's never one bit surprised


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