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Muntjac deer

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 30/12/2008 08:49:00

pretty widespread, especially around the midlands.Muntjac are not friends of the gardener and are quite capable of doing a fair bit of damage, not only to the soft shoots of emerging plants but can also strip bark from trees. You can deter them from


Garden birds and the Big Garden Birdwatch

By Kate Bradbury on 14/01/2010 18:07:47

Garden Birdwatch.Birds will only visit gardens where they feel safe. The ideal bird-friendly garden has a mixture of trees and shrubs for birds to shelter in, a lawn from which ground-feeding birds can forage for ants and worms, and a wild, grassy area


Oak processionary moth

By Pippa Greenwood on 21/04/2010 16:37:29

, then after a minute or two's pause the rear part of the procession dutifully walked around their crushed relatives/friends and carried on their way.We traced them back to the most amazing 'ball' of caterpillars which gradually unfurled to release those


Why are the birds ignoring their food?

By Kate Bradbury on 03/12/2010 15:29:13

of food, but what about the blue tits, great tits and other small birds? If only I could tell them how much high-energy food is waiting for them in my garden.No matter how hungry birds are, they'll only visit gardens in which they feel safe. A bird-friendly


Bug hunt and rosemary leaf beetle

By Richard Jones on 20/05/2008 13:14:00

and inquisitive children, eager to find out all about the wildlife they have found and held in their own hands. Their eyesight is so good, and they're all immensely proud of the often tiny specks of protoplasm which would be passed over in a blink by their parents


Frogs and slugs

By Adam Pasco on 25/08/2008 11:23:00

and toads. And what's on the menu for these visiting friends? Slugs!It's been a month of drizzly weather (a typical British summer, but that's another story), and just perfect for salads. The one saving grace is that I haven't needed to find another 30


Snakes in the grass

By Richard Jones on 24/06/2009 17:17:16

.But two days later I get a call that the beast has been seen, found, captured, and is awaiting my attention in a garden refuse bag in the Portakabin. So now our private menagerie has increased by one snake.Our scaly friend precisely illustrates, for me


Building a green roof

By Kate Bradbury on 18/11/2011 15:00:08

Since I bought my shed, I've been itching to put a green roof on it, but I’ve always been put off by how difficult the task looks. Luckily, a friend asked if she could do the job for me, for a book she's writing. So last weekend, she turned up


Feeding birds in summer

By Gardeners' World on 12/07/2011 06:48:10

is, to a large extent, the result of gardening habits. The more bird-friendly the garden, the more birds it will support.As we and the birds enjoy the summer sunshine, autumn and winter (when food is more scarce) are only a couple of months away


Moving bumblebee nests

By Kate Bradbury on 20/05/2011 18:22:21

I have bumblebees nesting in my garden. They didn't choose to live there, I introduced them. Or rather, I rescued them.With a reputation for being a bit of a bee fanatic, I get the odd call from friends of friends who have bumblebees nesting


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