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9 results returned

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Wildlife (9)

Authors

Richard Jones (7)
Kate Bradbury (2)

Date Range

More than 12 months (9)

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Slug sex

By Richard Jones on 15/09/2010 08:02:31

Thankfully, Buster the guinea-pig has a thick night-time cover of old carpet, otherwise he might have been shocked to discover the fornication going on outside his hutch one morning last week. When I peered out from the kitchen at 6.30am, two great


Insects and snow

By Richard Jones on 11/02/2009 08:53:46

, but for the most of us garden wildlife means the insects that are always about, always different, and always fascinating. Except when there is snow on the ground.When there is snow cover, nothing moves. So I was curious to see what would be the first insect


Birds in winter

By Richard Jones on 07/01/2009 11:08:42

Nearly back to normal now, after Christmas and New Year. Sunday saw us with 3-year-old scooting in Dulwich Park. Thankfully there was no wind, because it was blisteringly cold, and the ground was still covered in frost. So when I saw a small bird


Swifts, newts and decking

By Richard Jones on 07/05/2008 12:12:00

counted about 15, the same number we get every year, give or take. They're late this year; in 2007 it was May 2nd.Then it was newts, three of them paddling about at the bottom of the pond. They were easily visible against the new butyl liner I had to put


Why are the birds ignoring their food?

By Kate Bradbury on 03/12/2010 15:29:13

Last winter, when I went to great trouble to feed the birds in my garden, my offerings were largely ignored. This winter, I'm trying again, leaving seeds, chopped apples and suet pellets for ground-feeding birds such as robins, blackbirds


Strasbourg

By Richard Jones on 03/08/2011 12:06:18

a tight-pruned lime and a small cypress. Nevertheless, the city is splashed all over with natural colour as sills, walls, yards and railings are covered with pots and window boxes.Some buildings in the rickety 'old quarter' are so bedecked they look


Dead thrushes and the bloody nose beetle

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

and more sky than I can take in even with both eyes. There is just too much wildlife to look at in detail, so here is a mélange from the first week of our stay.Saturday 7th August 2010 Everything is much greener than England so they've obviously had more


Wolf spiders

By Richard Jones on 13/05/2009 15:37:26

they hunted in packs, like wolves. Of course, each is hunting alone, but they often appear in numbers at this time of year, scurrying across bare ground in the spring sunshine.The ones running around my tulips are Pardosa, and although I can't decide exactly


Garden habitats for frogs

By Kate Bradbury on 01/04/2011 16:12:06

to dismantling and removing it, only to find around 15 frogs buried in the compost, asleep. I quickly covered them back up and left them alone again.Frogs residing in grow bags is nothing knew. I spoke to frog expert Jules Howard, who said grow bags make


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