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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


Cleaning out bird boxes

By Adam Pasco on 12/11/2012 15:38:00

starting point. When choosing new plants, bear wildlife in mind and look for those that will provide safe shelter and perching places. In addition, put up nest boxes wherever you have a suitable position - reasonably high up and out of direct, scorching sun


Centipedes and worms

By Richard Jones on 02/02/2011 11:13:54

It was blisteringly cold on Sunday, and the water butts were frozen over, but it was not a deep frost. So repairing and replacing the raised beds up at the allotment was relatively easy. The old scaffold planks we put in four or five years ago have


How to install a window bird feeder

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

bird table.Browse plants that are attractive to wildlifeBrowse a variety of plants with berries


Help wildlife survive winter

By Gardeners' World on 11/11/2011 15:00:41

Winter wildlifeMost garden wildlife hibernates over winter, as food is in short supply and freezing temperatures make life difficult. Learn how to help wild creatures through the cold winter months, below.In winter, wild animals and insects hunker


Gardening for bats

By Kate Bradbury on 22/07/2011 16:56:22

at the edge of the water in total darkness with bats swirling around me.Like so much of our wildlife, bats are having a hard time. This is mostly due to the widespread use of pesticides in agriculture. British bats feed exclusively on insects, so spraying


In praise of woodlice

By Richard Jones on 26/11/2008 13:02:26

have a virtually water-proof skin based on the carbohydrate/protein mix of chitin, woodlice are still using an evolutionarily rather antiquated formula based on calcium carbonate, the main constituent of chalk.My pictures are really just an excuse


An orgy of ants

By Richard Jones on 12/08/2009 10:27:22

The warm humid evenings of late July and early August have brought out the flying ants again. These are the very common black pavement ant, Lasius niger. A few years ago we had a nest in one of our large plant pots and it was amazing to see


Garden habitats for frogs

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

frogs poking their heads out two months later, when watering my tomatoes.In autumn, determined that the frogs and insects would have a safe place to spend the winter, I left the grow bag in place, cutting down the tomato haulms and placing them and other


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


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