London (change)
Today 9°C / 6°C
Tomorrow 16°C / 9°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

1 to 10 of 13 results

Categories

Wildlife (13)

Authors

Richard Jones (13)

Date Range

Last 6 months (1)
More than 12 months (12)

Related Searches

birds

In praise of woodlice

By Richard Jones on 26/11/2008 13:02:26

I'm always slightly perplexed when I hear someone talking about woodlice as if they were garden pests. My garden is full of the critters, but I've never even had need to raise my voice at them. They crowd around the flowerpots, under logs and stones


Roses and their pests

By Richard Jones on 27/02/2008 10:20:00

elbows whenever I go past. It's a tough old brute. So I have no worries at all that it is being attacked by a battalion of major garden pests.It's been very mild this winter so it's no surprise that things are already active. The new leaf shoots


The flies have it

By Richard Jones on 07/11/2007 09:57:49

to be relatively common. And second they have to have some impact on humans: they have to be pretty or sinister, pest or helper, biter or worth eating. In other words, they have to get noticed. Tachina fera is large, but it has the secretive life style of searching


Wireworms

By Richard Jones on 18/02/2009 15:48:08

in the moist soil is a wireworm. I know these are supposed to be notorious garden and agricultural pests, but like so many insects, I can't really treat them as pests unless they reach pest proportions. A few of last year's potatoes had small holes in them


Wasp alert

By Richard Jones on 13/08/2007 10:57:49

predators in the garden and they attack all manner of real pests including caterpillars, aphids and flies. They feed the chewed remains to their grubs back at the nest. The last five years have been really bad for wasps; either the hibernating queens have


The birch sawfly

By Richard Jones on 01/07/2009 14:47:08

nursery presented me with a dead specimen found flying around indoors last year.Unlike the berberis sawfly, which has caused quite a running commentary on this blog, Cimbex is never a garden pest, since it never reaches pest proportions. Instead


Insects on roses

By Richard Jones on 03/12/2008 10:01:09

. At each scale an ant would stop, tickle it with its antennae, and suck up the small droplet of honeydew that was presented.Neither of these insects has ever reached pest proportions in my garden, so I've never had need to regard them as pests. On the other


Nature in the garden

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

to be a particular problem; this is a very distant rumour for me though, none has yet made its way this far into the capital.I’m not surprised that deer can be a right pest in the garden, elegant and beautiful though they are. For the last few decades


Black-headed gulls

By Richard Jones on 02/01/2013 15:25:41

antisocial.We get the occasional seagull in our East Dulwich garden but, maybe its because Southwark Council have banished bin-bags by the imposition of fleets of different coloured wheelie bins, they are not common, and they have not yet reached pest


Japanese knotweed

By Richard Jones on 19/08/2009 11:07:22

When we moved into our previous house, in Nunhead, there was some small, but well-established growth of Japanese knotweed in the back garden. It took four years of pulling up stalks and roots to get rid of it … at least I think we got rid of it


1 to 10 of 13 results
Search time: 0.025 secs