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Big Butterfly Count

By Kate Bradbury on 14/07/2011 16:28:23

to me). Just 20 years ago he'd find red admirals, peacocks, small tortoiseshells, gatekeepers and common blues in his garden. Now, he never sees those species - just the odd cabbage white, if he's lucky.What's happening to our butterflies is tragic


Swifts, newts and decking

By Richard Jones on 07/05/2008 12:12:00

- but a shaft of sunlight through the scattered pondweed shows the dancing hordes of water fleas. The water is clear and clean so I'm expecting great things in coming months.I spent a lot of time in the garden on Sunday and Bank Holiday Monday. Why


Blackbirds nesting in my garden

By Adam Pasco on 17/06/2008 13:11:00

is there for a gardener than the reward of having wildlife use the habitat created for them? Two pairs of blackbirds regularly dart about my lawn feeding, chasing and protecting their territory. I'm not sure where their boundaries lie or whether they're happy


Frogs and toads in the garden

By Richard Jones on 27/02/2013 12:56:32

, and occasionally a frog will be sitting in it. As far as I know they have never bred there. But somewhere else, near at hand, hidden from my view, there must be other small garden ponds, more frog- and toad-friendly ponds, where successful spawning does take place


Shieldbugs

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

.Its English name is the gorse shieldbug, and far from attacking garden plants, it focuses its attention on gorse. As far as I know there is no gorse anywhere in gardens hereabouts, but there's a small broom at the front of our house. It will also feed on other


Spider eggs and Christmas crackers

By Richard Jones on 23/12/2009 08:02:50

It's cold, there's snow on the ground, and all is quiet in the garden. But I've just been outside feeding the wildlife. In my case that does not mean putting up nut-filled bird feeders or hanging fat balls, it means tipping the kitchen waste


Attract wildlife to your garden pond

By Gardeners' World on 20/10/2011 13:30:32

Even a small pond will make a big difference to your garden, attracting a wide range of creatures. Let wildlife find your pond naturally and it will soon become a thriving habitat for anything from mayflies to hedgehogs.Give your pond the best


Insects on roses

By Richard Jones on 03/12/2008 10:01:09

. At each scale an ant would stop, tickle it with its antennae, and suck up the small droplet of honeydew that was presented.Neither of these insects has ever reached pest proportions in my garden, so I've never had need to regard them as pests. On the other


Dragonflies

By Richard Jones on 26/05/2011 10:25:10

, solid bright apple green thorax and broad strong tail stripes (green in female, blue in male). This is a bit early for one of the large hawker dragonflies, which normally start to fly from mid-June onwards. I'm guessing it came from a small garden pond


Stag beetles

By Richard Jones on 08/06/2011 16:38:55

in the washing off of the line. He’s small, but perfectly formed. At 35mm, excluding the antler jaws, he is way down below the usual size spectrum of 45-60mm. I’ve only ever seen one smaller, just over 27mm, found dead in a friend’s garden in Sydenham several


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