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Bug hunt at Gardeners' World Live

By Richard Jones on 13/06/2008 12:46:00

[brightcove exp=1463233149&vref=1604897763]Even though it's been raining here at Gardeners' World Live, we've been on a bit of a bug hunt...


Garden lowlife

By Richard Jones on 01/10/2008 12:54:00

The only wildlife I've seen this week has been the rather dead-life brought in by the cats - three and a half mice and a rat not much smaller than our guinea pig. I'm more or less calm that we have mice in the compost bins, but I'm uneasy about


Pyramidal orchids

By Richard Jones on 15/07/2009 11:21:27

I've commented before that I don't think 'wildlife' should refer to animals only. It should also include plants, even though most wild plants are referred to as weeds when they turn up in gardens. I wonder what the owner of the garden in East


Insects and snow

By Richard Jones on 11/02/2009 08:53:46

The snow was great fun, but it made wildlife watching in my garden a bit pointless. I am rather biased on this, because as far as I'm concerned, wildlife really means insects. OK, there are a few birds and the odd squirrel out there


Death in mysterious circumstances

By Richard Jones on 05/09/2007 10:57:49

I have cats. Every so often I have to live with the guilt that they kill the local wildlife. It's usually one of the mice breeding in the compost heaps or a blue-tit fledgling. The main hunter is the black and white one; lovely and soft and over


Strasbourg

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

.I'm surprised, though, to see little sign of wildlife at any of these flower pots - just a lone honeybee and a couple of pigeons.It is only down by the river's edge that I can see what I might call real wildlife in a garden. A tiny concrete balcony


The juniper shieldbug

By Richard Jones on 01/02/2013 12:55:51

. Not that simple at all.In this case, the tree being felled was a massive cypress, a good 15 metres high and probably four metres across near the base; it was a great blemish of a tree, a dark hulk, a brooding monster. Whatever people’s attitudes to gardening might


Elks in Vancouver

By Richard Jones on 27/08/2008 13:57:00

pretty impressive, certainly the biggest wildlife I've ever seen in any garden. They didn't seem to do too much damage to the annuals, but left plenty of droppings which had to be cleared up before our neighbours could play croquet later in the day


Felling trees

By Richard Jones on 15/10/2008 12:54:00

an appreciation of nature, wildlife and the environment. It had to go.Over the last few months I've regularly logged on to the RSPB Homes for Wildlife web pages just to see how my meagre gardening skills are keeping pace with their recommendations


What's nibbling my Lilies?

By Richard Jones on 11/07/2007 10:57:49

After writing an article on how and why to keep a garden wildlife diary for BBC Gardener's World Magazine, I've been invited to go electronic and turn it into a blog. My handwriting is atrocious so maybe this will be a good way of keeping the diary


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