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9 results returned

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Wildlife (5)
Gardeners' musings (3)
Plants (1)

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Kate Bradbury (9)

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More than 12 months (9)

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Chelsea 2010: my verdict

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

nibbled by caterpillars and I don't have any white foxgloves.The planting schemes in many of the gardens this year were superb. The Bradstone Biodiversity Garden was richly planted with cirsium, alliums, aquilegia and iris, and it seemed to be doing


Saving foxglove seeds

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

, was a fat, green caterpillar. I've no idea what the caterpillar was; there are so many green caterpillars, and not all of them are the small cabbage white. I grudgingly decided that butterflies and moths are far fewer in number than foxgloves, and a new


Bumblebees and wax moth

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

the bumblebee nest and hangs around outside for a few days to pick up its scent. Once she has done this, she enters the nest undetected to lay her eggs. These hatch into caterpillars, which start off by eating the nest debris before moving to the wax pots


Cuckoos

By Kate Bradbury on 02/09/2011 16:53:41

for Ornithology (BTO) research suggests it could be related to the changing nesting behaviour of its hosts, plus a decline of available food (caterpillars). Cuckoos usually lay their eggs in the nests of dunnocks, meadow pipits, pied wagtails and reed warblers


A dry spring

By Kate Bradbury on 06/05/2011 13:07:46

What a spring we're having. Provisional Met Office reports suggest April was the warmest on record. It was also the 11th driest, based on average rainfall across the UK. Scotland's rainfall has been 110% above normal levels, while the South-East has


Garden birds and the Big Garden Birdwatch

By Kate Bradbury on 14/01/2010 18:07:47

, where birds such as sparrows can hunt for caterpillars and garden pests. A clean bird bath provides them with water to drink and clean their feathers (which enables them to insulate themselves against the cold).There’s nothing like that in my garden


Guerrilla gardening and planting tulips

By Kate Bradbury on 14/10/2011 14:50:04

ready for the council to come and collect. On some of the leaves were ladybird pupae, while spiders spun new webs in the wreckage. There may also have been chrysalises of the holly blue butterfly, whose caterpillars feed on ivy in summer. They


Garden birds and Feed the Birds Day

By Kate Bradbury on 28/10/2010 11:10:54

.At the height of breeding season the blue tit returned, though was scared off by a pair of great tits, which visited several times a day. They snacked on peanuts and gathered caterpillars and aphids for their babies. Sadly, they didn't return with their fluffy


Hedgehogs in the garden

By Kate Bradbury on 28/10/2011 13:28:15

In the 1950s, the UK was home to some 30 million hedgehogs. Now it's estimated that there are just one million, according to a recent report published by the People’s Trust for Endangered Species (PTES). It’s not known exactly why hedgehogs


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