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Wildlife (3)
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Richard Jones (4)

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More than 12 months (4)

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Do we really want wildlife in our gardens?

By Richard Jones on 26/10/2011 16:21:10

is that the well-drained substrate (usually including crushed brick and concrete) produces a sparse vegetation of mainly annual wildflowers, and areas of bare ground that rapidly warm up in the sun. This favours the warmth-loving insects that elsewhere in Britain


Fruit flies

By Richard Jones on 27/12/2007 10:35:00

heard of.So I'm quite impressed when I discover that I actually have two other species living in my potato peelings and banana skins: D. immigrans and D. hydei. Both are apparently very common in 'decaying vegetable matter'. I'll remember that when I


Weeds and wildlife

By Richard Jones on 14/05/2008 12:51:00

animals are transient, they come, they go; but wild plants ... they come, they stay, they get in the way, they interfere, and they compete with the flowers and vegetables we choose to grow. I think this attitude to 'weeds' is grossly unfair, so here


Strasbourg

By Richard Jones on 03/08/2011 12:06:18

, no doubt they take sustenance at the cafe/bistros in the square next door, but here is where they roost and maybe nest.And hidden in a narrow side alley, thick with natural vegetation as well as garden escapes is something you might only find in the largest


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