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New arrivals

By Adam Pasco on 16/07/2007 10:58:02

that slide shut like a portcullis to trap any rat that dares enter to dine on tasty morsels within.My trap was set up along the dividing fence. Checked with trepidation every morning, the sensitive trapdoor had regularly dropped, but nothing lurked within


More on cats

By Richard Jones on 12/10/2007 10:57:49

Abbey and published by Routledge in 1909. Abbey was obviously a practical man, he divides cats into two classes - ornamental and useful. He quickly glosses over the ornamentals, more or less dismissing them as docile, tractable and maybe even good


Swifts, newts and decking

By Richard Jones on 07/05/2008 12:12:00

returned.I'm no bird expert, but these harbingers of summer lift my heart when, as now, they scream their victorious celebration of return across the heavens. They made one low sweep together, a passing salute, then divided and wheeled off to the horizon. I


Frogs and toads in the garden

By Richard Jones on 27/02/2013 12:56:32

sides, as in ambidextrous) and bios (life), meaning that these wonderful creatures are equally happy on both sides of the water/land divide.Very shortly, pond or no, gardens are more likely to see frogs and toads than ever, because now is the start


How to make a bat box

By Gardeners' World on 21/01/2011 17:04:02

diameterPencil, wood saw, rulerFebruary - October2 hoursUsing a pencil, divide and cut the plank into the following sized pieces: 40cm x 15cm (back), 23cm x 20cm (roof) and 23cm x 15cm (front). Finally cut a piece 20cm x 34cm and cut it diagonally to create


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