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Richard Jones (27)

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Wasps

By Richard Jones on 30/09/2009 09:41:55

It's getting to that time of year when wasp behaviour changes. And as far as most people are concerned, it's a change for the worse. Since wasps don't have that many friends to start with, this is a yet further serious decline in their reputation


Wasps

By Richard Jones on 11/05/2011 08:04:48

I’m rather hoping that 2011 will be a good year for wasps. Unfortunately, my definition of a good year is sometimes at odds with other people’s. For me, a good year is seeing wasps by the bucket load.There is more to this than a perverse I


Wasp alert

By Richard Jones on 13/08/2007 10:57:49

2007 will be remembered as a very good year for wasps. But before people start complaining about their vicious stings and bad tempers, I must point out that wasps are actually our friends. After birds and spiders, they are the most important insect


Queen wasp

By Richard Jones on 10/04/2013 13:00:00

more than his fair share of the frolicking.A dead leaf was twitching on the water’s surface, and gently peeling it up, expecting to see an animated amphibian beneath, revealed, instead, a queen wasp.Whether she had fallen from the ivy-clad fence nearby


Those wasps are still going strong

By Richard Jones on 17/10/2007 11:18:49

.I was also surprised to see that the wasp nest, two plots down, was still abuzz. At the end of the season, wasp colonies normally rather fizzle out. There is usually a little bit of activity from the last remaining workers as the new queens and males


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


Wasps and spiders

By Richard Jones on 28/09/2011 16:54:08

marble or polished granite.But, as ever, it is the wasps that are making more than their fair share of the humming. And it is also they that are being killed. There are several spider webs amongst the ivy flowers, and some rather fat-looking and obviously


Beetles, wasps and toads

By Richard Jones on 04/06/2008 11:12:00

queen wasp making a nest in the shed. Much as I like wasps, and no matter how long I bang on about them being 'the gardener's friends' - helpful, interesting and attractive - I can't have a nest of 10 thousand of them guarding the rakes and spades


Hornets

By Richard Jones on 12/10/2011 17:02:52

had met a foul end because of their ill-deserved reputation and wholly misunderstood life style.Despite their size and loud buzzing, hornets, Vespa crabro, are the most docile of our social wasps, and also the most secretive. It was a wonder to see


Hornets and hoverflies

By Richard Jones on 13/08/2008 12:30:00

and 1950s, there was a series of sightings of this spectacular insect, which, as time went on, became more frequent.Most black and yellow wasp-like hoverflies bear aphid-eating larvae so beloved of gardeners. Volucella larvae have a much more exotic life


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