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Draining ponds

By Kate Bradbury on 09/04/2010 14:13:11

in flower all year round. I've never seen a frog there but I know they're about as last year the pond was full of frogspawn and tadpoles. That was, until the pond was drained in spring.I never found out why the pond was drained. It was filled in again


Mouse in the compost bin

By Kate Bradbury on 19/08/2011 13:10:14

There's a mouse living in my compost bin. I first saw it one evening the other week, when I added a fresh layer of tomato side shoots and yellowing leaves. It leapt out of the bin and charged through the border. That frog looks just like a mouse, I


Pond plants

By Kate Bradbury on 26/02/2010 16:23:36

the offending plants and what to do if you have them growing in your pond (remove and compost them, basically).Great. But what should we plant in our ponds to replace the offenders? My blog on dead frogs highlighted the need for oxygenating plants to maintain


Autumn gardening jobs

By Kate Bradbury on 23/09/2011 17:36:30

by slugs and snails, and I spent many hours watching blackbirds foraging among the debris.In spring I tackled the garden in one go, removing leaves spiked on emerging bulbs, clearing spent stems and staking perennials. Only the still-sleeping frogs


Composting in winter

By Kate Bradbury on 17/12/2010 16:26:51

is full. Hurry up spring. My compost bin fills up every winter. It’s a lovely wooden beehive type that looks perfect in our tiny garden. It’s sited against the south-facing wall and gets really hot and steamy in summer. The frogs love it and it’s full


Growing veg in containers - garden pests

By Kate Bradbury on 10/06/2011 16:35:44

critters in my garden - the blue and great tits tackle the aphids for me (ladybirds don't get a look in), while the frogs and blackbird do a good job of keeping vine weevil numbers down. The frogs also make sure the slugs have no chance of establishing a


Native plants

By Kate Bradbury on 04/12/2009 16:47:54

it into a wildlife garden. I'll plant it up with a range of local, native plants (as well as some of my favourite bee-friendly cultivars), and monitor the wildlife that it attracts. So far we just have a friendly pigeon visiting, and the frogs I rescued from


Artificial grass

By Kate Bradbury on 13/08/2010 10:43:21

noticed, except the butterflies, of course, and the blackbirds and the robin and the frogs.I can see the benefits of having an artificial lawn, a lawn that stays green and lush under trees and in between goal posts, that you don't have to get up to mow


Wilding the Chelsea Flower Show

By Kate Bradbury on 23/05/2011 15:20:50

couple of ducks were found in Ann Marie Powell's British Heart Foundation Garden and a frog was sat in the stream of the SKYShades Garden. When I arrived on Sunday, everything was buzzing with the sound of honey and bumblebees foraging on the variety


Vine weevils again

By Kate Bradbury on 30/09/2010 16:12:19

, and I won’t be giving pots another dressing of nematodes this autumn. I'm hoping my frogs are keeping the population under control (they're certainly getting fat on something), and I'd hate to deny them food.Perhaps in another six months I'll be writing


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