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Wildlife (22)
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Richard Jones (26)

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Squirrels and skulls

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

on. All I could see was the squirrel’s back end, with its fluffy tail twitching sinuously back and forth like a snake charmer’s serpent. It seemed to have its head buried in one of my skulls.Along with the fox skulls nailed to the shed and the flag


Footprints in the snow

By Richard Jones on 22/12/2010 12:08:17

as they flick their way along the fence. Then there is the fox again.Our garden, it seems, is as much a thoroughfare as ever. I've a house full of coughing and wheezing children at the moment, so none of us has gone out to disturb the snow. But there are tracks


Wildlife and wild death

By Richard Jones on 18/06/2008 12:14:00

.Unfortunately, the foxes that frequented the many out-of-the-way wildlife havens along the tracks could not read the danger signs and it was not uncommon to come across the remains of one picked clean beside the rails. At one time we had a good half dozen fox skulls around


Dung beetles

By Richard Jones on 09/01/2008 10:08:00

because he knew mankind would often be in its presence.Nowadays the only dung I ever get first-hand experience of (although it's usually first-foot experience) is dog, cat or fox, and none of them is renowned for its sweet scent. I have found the odd


Blanket weed in garden ponds

By Richard Jones on 03/09/2008 13:57:00

for all to watch.Another time we learned that foxes liked to play with the drying weed left on the pond edges. Early one morning there were three or four young cubs out there frolicking with the stuff. Apart from snatching it from each other and playing


Garden birds and their predators

By Richard Jones on 03/03/2010 10:49:02

I'm just back from a weekend visiting an old friend in Banwell, near Weston-Super-Mare. Always envious of his rambling house and large walled garden, we got to talking over garden wildlife and the troubles of traipsing fox dung through the kitchen


Death in mysterious circumstances

By Richard Jones on 05/09/2007 10:57:49

-exuberant with his cuddles, but a rascal who fights with his sister, and the neighbours' moggies and who is not one bit daunted by the local foxes. He has a collar with warning bell, but he manages to lose it occasionally. I buy another and its keeps the children


Garden lowlife

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

the increasing number of rats; that's four in a month now. I guess I'll just have to accept that we live in a city, so they'll be everywhere.Last week a fox was regularly walking through the garden between 6 and 6.30am. I used to wonder why I would see them


Nature in the garden

By Richard Jones on 23/11/2011 12:48:35

There is a delicate balance between wanting to see nature in the garden, and suffering the consequences of its visits. I am decidedly at the easy end of the spectrum, and all I have to worry about are a few dollops of fox faeces in return for close


Bird watching

By Richard Jones on 21/11/2007 10:57:49

tasty had somehow got wedged in it. I've cleared out plenty of chicken bones from our gutters over the years, dropped there, I think, by crows who have raided gardens where titbits have been left out for cats or foxes.Then it was the jays, three of them


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