London (change)
Today 18°C / 12°C
Tomorrow 16°C / 11°C
Keywords:
Sort by:

1 to 10 of 41 results

Woodpigeons

By Richard Jones on 17/12/2008 09:04:02

The woodpigeons are back. Not that they had gone away, just that I’ve noticed them a lot over the last week. I love the way they strut their plump bodies about on the lawn, peering intently into the wet grass as if looking for something they lost


Nesting robins

By Kate Bradbury on 15/04/2013 17:35:28

. She's not sure where in the shed they are nesting, but robins are known for choosing odd places such as car engines and coat pockets. Perhaps they've built the nest in the lawn mower? Wouldn't that be a nice excuse not to mow the lawn?At first, both


Urban foxes

By Richard Jones on 09/06/2010 17:10:02

bare clipped lawn, a fair amount of old concrete paths, and naked chain-link fence. Now we have several rambling thickets of rose, ivy, clematis and vine, a 'secret' sun-lit patio beyond the pergola (I'm still extremely proud of my construction), a pond


Do we really want wildlife in our gardens?

By Richard Jones on 26/10/2011 16:21:10

I’m afraid I’ve been rather disparaging about fat balls and landscape gardeners again. It all came out at the Kent Wildlife Conference, held on Saturday at the University of Greenwich’s swanky new Medway Campus, down in Chatham.The theme


Wildlife-friendly plants

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:40:38

Nectar BarAt Berryfields, we have made what we called the Nectar Bar alongside our big pond. Butterflies are among the more beautiful visitors we hope to attract, but all nectar-drinking creatures are welcome here.Any garden created for wildlife


Black-headed gulls

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

attacking children to get at their ice-creams, or raiding hand-held fish and chips, the main bone of contention (and it is very often a bone they’re contending), is that they rip open bin-bags and scatter the contents over the front lawn. It’s all very


Magpies and mice

By Richard Jones on 13/02/2008 09:20:00

observation and we had a short discussion on the significance of contrasting coloration, the myths surrounding hoarded jewels and foil sweet wrappers and the distinctions between other sorts of pie.As it fluttered down to the lawn I was just about to slip


Speckled wood butterflies

By Richard Jones on 28/04/2010 11:45:27

of the lawn, then zoomed up and away. Several holly blues were skipping about over the ivy-covered fence at the weekend, all probably freshly emerged form chrysalides buried deep inside the tangled thatch.But what really caught my eye was the pas de deux dance


Frogs

By Richard Jones on 21/07/2010 11:07:51

the washing. Whatever, suddenly there it was, hopping sedately up the lawn.Frogs always cause a hullabaloo in our garden and this one was soon surrounded by curious children, wondering where it had come from, and what they were to do about it. Leave it alone


Holiday wildlife

By Richard Jones on 27/10/2010 15:37:05

of wildlife. The back garden is just 30 square metres of close-mown lawn and the front garden has just a few neat beds of geraniums and some small decorative cypresses. It's a holiday bungalow, so the garden is kept to a maintenance-free minimum


1 to 10 of 41 results
Search time: 0.016 secs