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What's nibbling my Lilies?

By Richard Jones on 11/07/2007 10:57:49

After writing an article on how and why to keep a garden wildlife diary for BBC Gardener's World Magazine, I've been invited to go electronic and turn it into a blog. My handwriting is atrocious so maybe this will be a good way of keeping the diary


Cats and foxes

By Richard Jones on 16/03/2011 10:22:17

much rather take easy pickings.It is an oft-forgotten rule, but the answer to the question 'what do carnivores eat?' is not 'meat' or 'other animal', but 'whatever they can get'. But this does not mean they are constantly on the ferocious hunt for prey


Insects in late-autumn

By Richard Jones on 05/11/2008 16:48:18

Although autumn hangs heavier in the air with each day, it only takes a brief break in the clouds to bring shy wildlife back out into the open. So it was on Friday last week when I headed for the horticultural delights of North Woolwich. Here


Robins in the garden

By Adam Pasco on 28/12/2009 09:14:58

for food at this time of year, but robins really do get up close, and don't appear to be scared.You feel as if they would feed out of your hand, but perhaps that is hoping too much. Instead, any worms turned over during digging are picked out and thrown a


Magpies and mice

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

into doggerel when all thought of sorrow or joy, girl or boy was erased from my mind. It purposefully stepped forward, picked up a dead mouse that was lying in the grass and flew off.We've had mice in the compost bins ever since we started putting kitchen waste


A jay in the garden

By Richard Jones on 22/10/2008 16:26:10

Monday morning and a jay visited the kitchen window. I always think these are incredibly handsome birds and the small blue wing feathers still give me a childish thrill when I find one dropped. I can't resist picking it up to stick in my hat


Hibernating wasps

By Richard Jones on 04/02/2009 10:15:38

by the snow.I regularly find queen wasps curled up, with their wings folded and tucked down underneath their bodies. With metabolism turned down to barely tick-over, they are immobile and can be closely examined (but not picked up) without risk of startling


Shieldbugs

By Richard Jones on 04/03/2009 08:10:29

hibernation now are mostly green, but the summer form has vague reddish brown patches across its back. It too has a slight smell of mouldy almonds, especially if picked up; these are the bitter-tasting cyanide compounds used by shieldbugs to deter predators


Jays

By Richard Jones on 18/03/2009 16:02:44

resist picking one up if I see it. They make the perfect adornment to my hat.


Centipedes and worms

By Richard Jones on 02/02/2011 11:13:54

to glide effortlessly along. But if you pick them up they tie themselves in knots. Literally. They curl into a rough ball, looping their curls together into a living clove hitch.Any gardener should always be pleased to find centipedes. Since


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