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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


Wireworms

By Richard Jones on 18/02/2009 15:48:08

with anyone growing plants for their roots or tubers. Most species, though, are dead wood feeders, and they include lots of very rare species, which only occur in old woodlands, ancient hedgerows and other important wildlife habitats. Their larvae feed


Fox droppings

By Richard Jones on 02/09/2010 10:27:06

the cats have left in the back garden. Could be rich pickings.


Garden wildlife and autumn tidying

By Richard Jones on 13/10/2010 08:01:15

into trouble. Especially as last weekend, I did a bit of, well, tidying in the garden. It was limited, however, to clipping a few stray rose branches that had suddenly shot out at eye height. And I picked up a few windfall apples to see which ones I could


Flying Ants Day

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

. Hot and humid is best, apparently.In any one area, ants from thousands of nests will take to the skies at once, forming large, mating swarms. It's exciting, not least for insect-eating birds, which have rich pickings for a day or two. Of the bird


Gardening for bats

By Kate Bradbury on 22/07/2011 16:56:22

. On warm, summer evenings we take our bat detector and a bag of chips to the canal and sit on a bench, waiting for pipistrelles and Daubenton's to emerge from their roosts. We've also been on guided bat walks and taken part in surveys, picking up


Mouse in the compost bin

By Kate Bradbury on 19/08/2011 13:10:14

20 seconds worrying what the neighbours would think, and then relaxed, happy with our new arrival.My bumblebees (RIP) were rescued from friends who were landscaping their garden; some of my frogs were rescued from a kitchen drain and the rest I picked


Snakes in the garden

By Kate Bradbury on 02/12/2011 16:59:42

’t allowed to pick it up.Some years later, when diving in Fiji, a sea snake slithered past me, just after I had got back in the boat. Two minutes earlier and I would have been able to swim with it, or at least follow it for a while, before it vanished


Birds and beetles

By Richard Jones on 21/11/2012 17:17:00

Within days, two scientific reports on Britain’s wildlife have made national news headlines because of their dire prognoses. The State of the UK’s Birds 2012, produced by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, British Trust for Ornithology


Hedgehog rescue

By Kate Bradbury on 07/12/2012 11:34:41

certainly in trouble and will need help. Pick the hedgehog up using an old towel or a pair of thick gardening gloves. Keep it warm by placing it on a hot water bottle wrapped in a towel, in a high-sided box lined with newspaper, and then place another towel


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