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Moths in the garden

By Kate Bradbury on 12/02/2013 17:31:47

Last week, Butterfly Conservation published a report called The State of Britain's Larger Moths 2013. It makes a depressing read, demonstrating a marked decline in the number of our larger moths over the last 40 years. The survey, conducted


Bumblebees and wax moth

By Kate Bradbury on 01/07/2011 12:11:26

A few weeks ago I wrote about moving a bumblebee nest from a friend's garden. At the end of the blog I mentioned that I'd found a wax moth in the nest.Wax moth is a native, natural predator of the bumblebee, but it's one of its biggest enemies


Growing auriculas

By Kate Bradbury on 22/03/2013 11:38:54

As a rule, I only grow plants that will benefit bees, moths and other pollinators. I do relax this rule, though, by growing auriculas. I do this for my partner, who loves them (even if bees don’t).We have built up quite a collection over the years


Growing orchids

By Kate Bradbury on 05/11/2009 16:11:55

I'm not sure I like moth orchids. They're pretty to look at when in flower, but a bit of a pain to care for if you want them to bloom again. And I think it's a bit sad that these beautiful plants, which should be growing in the canopy of an exotic


Leaf miners

By Kate Bradbury on 30/09/2011 17:40:21

Last year I wrote a blog about cuckoo spit, in which I documented the fauna that had appeared in my garden after I had transformed it from a paved courtyard. I celebrated the arrival of butterflies, birds, froghopper nymphs and moths, but was less


Rosebay willowherb

By Kate Bradbury on 06/06/2013 15:47:46

) grows to a height of around 1.5m. Its leaves grow around the stem like a staircase, and tall spires of pink flowers emerge in summer, attracting a range of insects. It’s also the main food plant of the majestic elephant hawk-moth, whose huge, elephant


Argentinian wildlife garden

By Kate Bradbury on 26/04/2013 14:37:19

and a wonderful stripy frog.Unlike most of her gardening friends, Fabiana grows native plants for moths and birds. A former farm, the land was sown mainly with Italian rye grass for grazing animals. Fabiana removed most of this grass and replaced


Cuckoo spit

By Kate Bradbury on 04/06/2010 16:04:49

tiny) garden.The garden isn't perfect and I've a long way to go, but I've documented my success by the variety of garden visitors I've gained since the transformation: blue tits and great tits, bumblebees, butterflies, moths, slugs, snails and leaf


Goldcrest encounter

By Kate Bradbury on 21/12/2012 15:05:39

. Like long-tailed tits, goldcrests eat insects and spiders, but specialise in tiny morsels such as moth eggs. Their beaks are designed to pick out insects from between pine needles. In really cold winters they will occasionally come to garden feeders, so keep


Saving foxglove seeds

By Kate Bradbury on 02/07/2010 17:01:47

, was a fat, green caterpillar. I've no idea what the caterpillar was; there are so many green caterpillars, and not all of them are the small cabbage white. I grudgingly decided that butterflies and moths are far fewer in number than foxgloves, and a new


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