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Frogs and slugs

By Adam Pasco on 25/08/2008 11:23:00

). For now, the important thing to remember is that frogs, toads, hedgehogs and birds can all help the gardener in the battle against slugs and snails, but if you don't have pests to feed these welcome predators they're not going to take up residence


Frost on flowers

By Adam Pasco on 25/02/2008 10:12:00

The early bird... gets very cold trying to photograph flowers in the frost. The weather this past week has been chilly in my neck of the woods, but frost brings its own beauty to our gardens. Frost is an ephemeral beauty that melts with the rising


Sparrows in the garden

By Pippa Greenwood on 26/06/2008 12:46:00

, and the children are always impressed by how both male and female parents feed their young. Sparrows may be small, brown and not particularly exciting to look at, but I love them. They melt my heart, they really do. I know some gardeners are driven crazy


Goldfinches, cats and children

By Richard Jones on 02/04/2008 11:57:00

There's not much happening in my garden this week. I think we're scaring everything away. And I can't just blame the cats stalking their quarry; Saturday's bouncy castle and baker's dozen of squawking three- and four-year-olds hasn't added much


Bluebells, tulips and the Malvern Show

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 06/05/2008 12:14:02

than that.By the way, we had a visitor to the garden this week: a stoat. It climbed over the roof of the barn and disappeared into a convenient hole in the bargeboard (presumably on a search for birds' nests). The only other time I have seen one


Cabbage white caterpillars

By Jane Moore on 12/09/2008 13:36:00

do have a girlie passion for butterflies - even the cabbage whites are lovely to see fluttering about the garden.There are organic sprays available and also a biological control, which I really must try next year. My current method of control


Organic pest control

By Adam Pasco on 28/09/2007 09:10:01

Parts of my garden have resembled something of a battleground this year. Why is it that all my favourite plants and crops have their very own pest to contend with? Grow lilies and you'll be hard pressed not to find lily beetle munching them. My


Hawthorn

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 27/05/2008 16:38:00

the young leaves were added to peoples' sandwiches; it supports at least 149 species of insect and the berries feed more than 23 species of bird; hawthorn is pollinated by dung flies and midges attracted to the mildly unpleasant smell and the fact


Owls in abundance

By Pippa Greenwood on 30/07/2007 12:03:35

of the nearby roof - grace and elegance is something an owl obviously takes many weeks to learn! A fantastic sight and I feel really honoured that they have decided to breed here. Smaller birds have been here in abundance too - the house sparrow numbers seem


Godshill Model Village

By Richard Jones on 16/04/2008 11:57:00

off. The densest is our tree of Oven's wattle, Acacia pravissima, now a huge impenetrable cushion of yellow flowers dominating the end of the garden. Part of the HFW scheme is a series of garden surveys and I've had more luck with April birds than


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