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The insects have gone berserk

By Richard Jones on 27/04/2011 11:03:05

For anyone who thought the cold winter might have been a bit harsh for wildlife, I hope the recent heatwave has been an eye-opener. I’ve certainly never seen so much insect life in April before. The garden has been awash with orange-tips, holly


Black-headed gulls

By Richard Jones on 02/01/2013 15:25:41

I’ve just come back from visiting my parents, who live in Newhaven, on the Sussex coast, between Brighton and Eastbourne; there were lots of gulls in their garden. As they live only about a mile from the pebble beaches of Seaford Bay, this is hardly


Fox droppings

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

the front garden; one to the left, and one to the right of the front gate. I think there has been something of a power vacuum whilst we’ve been away on holiday. I’m not taking this personally.I like to think of myself as something of an expert on dung — a


Garden habitats for frogs

By Kate Bradbury on 01/04/2011 16:12:06

I seem to have created the perfect habitat for my frogs. It's not a large garden, marsh or meadow, but a tatty grow bag from last year, screened by willow edging and topped with dead foliage. It's an absolute eyesore and I hate it, but to my frogs


Evicting a rat

By Kate Bradbury on 04/01/2013 15:43:41

of the garden. Backing onto a busy cycle path that runs between a pub and a bus stop, it’s routinely littered with pizza crusts and chicken bones. It’s easy to blame the goldfinches, but the problem lies with us.Many thanks to Amy Lewis, Wildlife Trusts


Of rats and tree rats

By Richard Jones on 05/12/2007 10:26:02

and sleeker beast; it must have been a black variety of the much larger and squatter 'brown' Rattus norvegicus. It was sitting beside the stream, which bubbles down through the ornamental gardens, grooming itself in the drizzle when I trotted past


Dead thrushes and the bloody nose beetle

By Richard Jones on 18/08/2010 16:43:31

To Soicherons, Villars-Dompierre, in the Cote d'Or region of France for two weeks and the wildlife here is subtly different to that in East Dulwich. For one thing we are surrounded by large flowery meadows, hedges dripping with Mirabelle plums


Garden birds and Feed the Birds Day

By Kate Bradbury on 28/10/2010 11:10:54

This Saturday (30 October) is RSPB Feed the Birds Day. To celebrate, I gave my feeders a good wash with hot water and disinfectant and bought some expensive bird seed. The birds, still busy eating aphids from the trees in the local park, are none


Bumblebees and climate change

By Richard Jones on 13/03/2013 13:04:46

against winter and hard times in the honeybees’ wax comb, and which gives a honeybee colony virtual immortality.]The pupils also knew a lot about climate change — ocean acidification, changes in ocean salinity, water level changes, ice sheet retreat


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