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Compost heaps and wildlife

By Kate Bradbury on 25/08/2011 16:32:12

concern ourselves with the slugs that eat our plants. But look inside your compost bin and you might find their yellow cousins, Limax flavus. Yellow slugs are a gardener’s friend, as they feed almost exclusively on decaying matter. I have only once seen


Garden birds and my Big Garden Birdwatch

By Kate Bradbury on 27/01/2011 16:01:59

visiting my plot. I put seed out for them which the pigeons couldn't reach (they had their own), and fashioned a snow-proof feeding station using an umbrella, which sheltered the birds and seed from snow. I left chopped apples in the borders. Everything


Cuckoos

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

to a cuckoo in the trees. What a beautiful sound, I thought. Then my granny told me that they lay eggs in other birds’ nests and the hatchling kicks out its adopted siblings while the parents continue to feed this monster, oblivious to the fact it


Dead thrushes and the bloody nose beetle

By Richard Jones on 18/08/2010 16:43:31

To Soicherons, Villars-Dompierre, in the Cote d'Or region of France for two weeks and the wildlife here is subtly different to that in East Dulwich. For one thing we are surrounded by large flowery meadows, hedges dripping with Mirabelle plums


Bumblebees and climate change

By Richard Jones on 13/03/2013 13:04:46

-important period of new nest foundation, is unpredictable wet and damp. The queens, still working alone before they have reared their first generation of workers, cannot get out to feed, or collect nectar and pollen for their brood, the subterranean nests


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