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Gardeners' musings (6)
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Kate Bradbury (19)

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More than 12 months (19)

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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


Garden habitats for frogs

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

I seem to have created the perfect habitat for my frogs. It's not a large garden, marsh or meadow, but a tatty grow bag from last year, screened by willow edging and topped with dead foliage. It's an absolute eyesore and I hate it, but to my frogs


Eating weeds

By Kate Bradbury on 18/03/2011 15:45:55

appeared in my garden soon after I converted it from a paved courtyard last year. It's not large enough and doesn't get enough sun to sustain breeding butterflies (most of which require large swathes of nettles in full sun to lay eggs), so I can munch away


Vine weevils again

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

A few months ago I wrote about vine weevil, which I had inadvertently brought into my garden in a pot of hellebores. I was worried they'd kill my orange tree (which pretty much always has something wrong with it) and my 'nursery' of seedlings. I


Biodiversity at the Malvern Show

By Kate Bradbury on 13/05/2011 15:08:08

't often seen together. The Gardeners' World TV crew was camped outside it for a large portion of the day, so look out for it on tonight's programme (13 May, 2011).Talking of diversity, the warm spring has ensured that the plant marquee has a much greater


Flying Ants Day

By Kate Bradbury on 08/07/2011 15:03:32

of the reasons cited for such declines is a lack of insect food. While sparrows and starlings have adapted to use garden bird feeders, insects form a large part of their diet and their young are almost exclusively fed on insects. And you'll never find swifts


Snowdrop days

By Kate Bradbury on 17/02/2011 22:50:04

Last weekend my partner and I attended one of the special snowdrop days at Chelsea Physic Garden. Saturday was a beautiful, clear sunny day and it was great being outside among catkins, unfurling leaf buds, early bees and, of course, snowdrops


Paving over front gardens

By Kate Bradbury on 28/04/2011 15:10:39

in urban areas where parking spaces are at a premium and there's a lack of availability of public transport. The popularity of low-maintenance gardens among the time-poor is also a factor. The RHS estimates around 12 square miles of London are lost


Planting spring bulbs

By Kate Bradbury on 27/08/2010 18:38:26

I’m going to plant my bulbs earlier this year, to avoid disturbing any hibernating creatures in colder weather. I've just bought 20 winter aconites, 20 Nectaroscordum siculum, and the Gardeners’ World magazine offers: 100 free alliums and 160


Guerrilla gardening and wildlife

By Kate Bradbury on 19/11/2010 16:27:42

annuals is one largely invented by Bunny Guinness and friends”. (Bunny can be heard talking about guerrilla gardening in the Radio 4 programme mentioned earlier.) Richard may have proved that not all guerrilla gardeners plant wildlife-poor bedding annuals


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