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


How to install a window bird feeder

By Gardeners' World on 19/07/2011 11:55:20

it topped up with feed in preference to any other feeders in your garden.Within a few weeks you'll be able to take the feeder from the pole and attach it to the window, where the birds will continue to visit.AdamAlways remember to provide fresh water


How to make a nectar-rich container display

By Gardeners' World on 20/07/2011 12:01:49

You can create a wildlife corner in eventhe smallest garden, and it doesn't have to be a patch of unmown grass or a scrambling scrub thicket. A single, large container will suffice, containing plants to attract bees, butterflies, hoverflies


Feeding birds in summer

By Gardeners' World on 12/07/2011 06:48:10

, by July and August there are millions more hungry mouths to feed. For tits, finches and sparrows, garden feeding stations provide a real lifeline. And even for birds like robins, wrens, thrushes and blackbirds, availability of insects, fruits and berries


How to make pine cone bird feeders

By Gardeners' World on 19/07/2011 11:51:56

Our gardens our becoming increasingly important places for wild animals and especially birds. By providing a regular supply of food and water, we can help birds survive the challenging winter months, when they can struggle to survive.One way you can


How to make fat cakes for birds

By Gardeners' World on 19/07/2011 11:53:21

.AdamKitchen scraps are great to use in the fat cakes but don't use anything too salty. Never use salted peanuts or very salty bacon.Attracting birds to your gardenMake a nesting area for birds on a pond, video projectInstall a window bird feederBirds and Bird Feeders


How to make a bird bath

By on 24/01/2013 15:34:49

Birds not only use water to drink, but they also bathe in it, helping them fluff up their feathers to insulate themselves against the cold. Experts have also found that clean birds are more streamlined, so can escape from predators quickly. Our bird bath is elevated, which will o...


Plants for bees

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:34:19

with the Bumblebee Conservation TrustFor a factsheet on flowers for attracting wildlife to your garden, see Garden Organic


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


Late-summer-nectar

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:33:22

. Insects you'll attract to your garden include buff-tailed and common carder bumblebees, honeybees, hoverflies, comma, painted lady, small tortoishell, speckled wood butterflies and the angel shades, dart and brimstone moths. Some will still be found


Small tortoiseshell butterflies

By Richard Jones on 08/05/2013 11:37:20

, but the discovery in 2011 that small tortoiseshell numbers had gone down by 68% in 10 years was pretty shocking. It has always been received wisdom that common generalist ‘garden’ species, like the small tort, were protected from some of the frightening declines


Search time: 0.016 secs