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Garden lowlife

By Richard Jones on 01/10/2008 12:54:00

The only wildlife I've seen this week has been the rather dead-life brought in by the cats - three and a half mice and a rat not much smaller than our guinea pig. I'm more or less calm that we have mice in the compost bins, but I'm uneasy about


Autumn lawn care

By Pippa Greenwood on 02/10/2008 15:10:00

on the grass seed and that I can continue to persuade our cat that the area is not a huge purpose-built litter tray.


Pussy galore

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 17/09/2007 10:32:02

Like Richard I too own a cat of which I am quite fond - she is what my daughter calls "middle sized" in other words tending towards the tubby. She is very good at sleeping and dismembering mice on my office floor.In spite of all this feline bonhomie


Bulbs under attack

By Pippa Greenwood on 12/02/2009 09:12:39

to flower.But last spring, thanks to the vigilance of our newly-acquired cat, the tulip bulbs did actually flower. The display was gorgeous. Old habits die hard, though, and this year I placed plastic trays over two low-level planters that were planted


Garden birds and their predators

By Pippa Greenwood on 29/05/2013 11:00:00

that they manage to produce any offspring at all.I put food out for them on a flat piece of wood, laid on top of the hedge - this is something I’d recommend to anyone who has their own or a neighbour’s cat to contend with. Even my very athletic rescue cat can’t get


Feeding the birds

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

oblivious of the loud whizzes and bangs that keep the cats huddled in a dark corner indoors somewhere. But the cats have cottoned on to this and the moment the explosions stopped, 10.13 in East Dulwich, the black one was out of the cat flap like a shot


Grey squirrels

By Richard Jones on 17/06/2009 18:19:39

their dextrous acrobatics and smile at their bobbity-skip gait without wanting to take a pop at them too often.Despite the cats, at least one squirrel regularly comes right up to our back door to have a sniff around. It will now be encouraged even more after we


Squirrels and skulls

By Richard Jones on 12/05/2010 09:03:48

It was the attentive cat looking out through the back door that first drew my eye to the grey squirrel. Even though its head was hidden, and therefore it could not see her, she knew that there was no point in dashing out through the cat flap


Fish out of water

By Richard Jones on 23/01/2008 11:06:00

-crispies and exclaimed that there was a fish on the floor.So there was. About 15cm long, slim and silver with reddish fins and tail. What? There can be little doubt that it was one of the felines that brought it home through the cat flap, but how?I'm now left wondering


A jay in the garden

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

the pig deliberately throws out tasty morsels to attract squirrels for an early morning gossip. The cats spend all day long waiting to charge out through the cat-flap after them, but always to no avail.When I first saw the jay, it startled and flew up


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