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Primula, lavender, aphids and slugs

By Jekka McVicar on 11/04/2008 17:23:00

with horticultural soft soap. After the initial spray, with the night temperatures warming up, we'll start our programme of integrated pest management. For aphid control we introduce parasitic wasps, hoverflies and ladybirds - the larvae (especially of the latter two


Nettles

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 08/07/2008 12:14:00

by boiling). They also provide food for the caterpillars of some of our loveliest butterflies, including red admirals, small tortoiseshells, peacocks and the lovely comma . They not only feed butterflies and ladybird larvae, but can also feed us (although


Bark life

By Richard Jones on 20/08/2008 15:49:00

named 'pine' ladybird, Exochomus quadipustulatus (left), which specialises in eating scale insects on broad-leaf and conifer trees. They're present as grey, wart-like pupae, and are pock-marking the bark like some strange disease.Scattered among them


Garden frost

By Adam Pasco on 12/01/2009 09:17:49

have dropped low enough to kill off some overwintering pests such as the woolly aphid I discovered on my apple trees last summer. The problem is that frost isn't that discerning, and unless beneficial insects like ladybirds are even hardier, or have


Birds: thrushes and fieldfares

By Richard Jones on 20/01/2010 16:31:48

’ve been writing this, a long-tailed tit just bobbed into that same apple tree, and a fox just popped through the gap in the fence and trotted up the muddy lawn. I’ve seen the first insect too — a harlequin ladybird. Normal service has been resumed.


Garden wildlife

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 11/10/2010 13:22:55

jam) and watched the ladybirds stumbling around like the bride's uncle at a wedding reception. I also wandered off to the vegetable garden and sneered at the caterpillars on the kale leaves.And now, as I sit here in my office there is a large and noisy


Guerrilla gardening and planting tulips

By Kate Bradbury on 14/10/2011 14:50:04

ready for the council to come and collect. On some of the leaves were ladybird pupae, while spiders spun new webs in the wreckage. There may also have been chrysalises of the holly blue butterfly, whose caterpillars feed on ivy in summer. They


Garden birds

By Richard Jones on 13/02/2013 07:09:00

I got up out of my sick bed to post this, I hope you know. Our brief dusting of snow may have gone, but it was too grim and grey to go exploring in the garden after hibernating ladybirds or flat-backed millipedes. Instead, I ventured upstairs


Those wasps are still going strong

By Richard Jones on 17/10/2007 11:18:49

queen buff-tailed bumblebee, was examining the compost heap; I guess she was searching out a suitable hibernation site. Every now and then something else would buzz past: rosemary leaf beetles, green shieldbugs and ladybirds were all very active


Garden sheds - pesticides of the past

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 08/04/2008 11:18:00

the lamp and got the hell out of the greenhouse as quickly as possible. Everything left in the place - aphids, lacewings, ladybirds and, probably, rats - was toast.I also found a box of arsenate of lead. This is another ancient insecticide that you


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