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Richard Jones (9)

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Elks in Vancouver

By Richard Jones on 27/08/2008 13:57:00

it was ... a large dog? Or maybe... I still have the hand-written welcome note left by our host on the table just inside the lobby "Richard, be aware that a medium-sized unaggressive bear is in the area. He won't bother you and is just mooching about."


Blanket weed in garden ponds

By Richard Jones on 03/09/2008 13:57:00

bit of gardening. I've just had another look at the RSPB Homes for Wildlife web pages and see that September is the best month for clearing some blanket weed off of the garden pond. How apposite, I'd noticed the pond was looking rather green and cloudy


Stag beetles

By Richard Jones on 25/06/2008 14:05:00

these wonderful creatures in my back garden. South London is now about the only place in the UK where you can regularly see these awesome monsters. My supposition is that when the housing boom spread across the area 100 to 150 years ago, it was one of the most


Pimpla hypochondriaca

By Richard Jones on 17/09/2008 12:18:00

The fabulous fine weather of Sunday saw me in the garden trimming back a rose bush that was reaching threateningly across the path at head height. Suddenly something other than a branch of thorns caught my eye - a dark flitting creature an inch long


Jersey tiger moth

By Richard Jones on 03/08/2007 10:57:49

in there.The garden spiders, Aranaeus diadematus, are starting to get very large and obvious, especially those round the compost bins. We compost everything we can, including kitchen waste, so clouds of fruit flies emerge every time I lift off the lid. Even


Godshill Model Village

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

of miniaturized people, buildings and landscape, they seem overly large, but this is just an optical illusion.There is a stark contrast between the Model Village garden and my own. The former is intensively managed - weeded, clipped, tidied, mulched and tilled


Garden butterflies

By Richard Jones on 30/04/2008 12:51:00

garden butterfly in this part of south-east London. But then, we are lucky to have lots of fairly large gardens down this way, and Dulwich is still the most wooded part of the metropolis. The caterpillars feed on grasses, particularly cock


No fly zone

By Richard Jones on 31/10/2007 09:16:49

eating and growing until just large enough to transform into the fleeting adult.Although I find them regularly, I've never seen vapourer caterpillars in any great numbers, but according to several of my moth books they can occasionally be so numerous


Felling trees

By Richard Jones on 15/10/2008 12:54:00

remove healthy trees" was their initial answer.The environmental and wildlife grounds for getting rid of it were overwhelming. The tree was not large enough to be of much benefit to nesting birds. Leyland cypress is a foodplant for next-to no


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