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Bumblebees in the compost bin

By Richard Jones on 27/05/2009 10:02:34

first found it at Crystal Palace in 2005, and now, there it is. Just the singleton was in the garden, but later the same day there were dozens visiting the raspberry flowers up at the allotment.B. hypnorum is handsome and unmistakable. The thorax is all


Frogs in the garden

By Kate Bradbury on 11/09/2009 12:35:12

We didn't have a pond when I was growing up. I always wanted one, but blew it after trying to walk on water once at Notcutts. I was hauled out and sent home wearing a bin bag, which put paid to any attempts at having a pond at home until many years later.My mum finally let me dig...


Oak processionary moth

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

into the depths of the garden. But a couple of days later we spotted them. We'd just driven the car through the gate and had stopped to close it before setting off for the day. Suddenly there were yells of a mixture of horror and fascination from the children. I


Squirrels, foxes and snow

By Richard Jones on 08/12/2010 15:11:42

through the fresh blanket sniffing for whatever it is in our garden that foxes sniff for. The squirrel did not see the fox, snow in its eye perhaps, but the fox saw his quarry immediately. He lowered his profile and spread his weight, tensing his back


Dragonflies

By Richard Jones on 26/05/2011 10:25:10

, solid bright apple green thorax and broad strong tail stripes (green in female, blue in male). This is a bit early for one of the large hawker dragonflies, which normally start to fly from mid-June onwards. I'm guessing it came from a small garden pond


Southern oak bush-cricket

By Richard Jones on 31/08/2011 11:56:10

. Much more likely it fell off the back of a lorry, or a family hatchback, or a saloon. It is now widespread in southern England.And there was one waiting for me in the front garden when I returned from Italy. I thought I found one a couple of years ago


Free range chickens

By James Alexander-Sinclair on 22/01/2008 11:29:00

If you have been struck by the sad plight of the battery hen recently and wish to do something about it then remember one important fact: chickens are rubbish gardeners. Forget the fanciful notion you had of having fluffy feathered folk strutting


Long-tailed tits

By Richard Jones on 01/04/2009 14:56:40

Big news from the RSPB Big Garden Birdwatch survey results just out: the long-tailed tit has made it, for the first time in the survey's 30-year history, into the top 10. I hardly ever saw these gregarious little birds until I moved to East Dulwich


Vine weevils

By Richard Jones on 08/04/2009 16:46:30

A recent comment to a blog entry got me thinking about vine weevils. I haven't seen many in my garden for a few years. I wonder if this is the result of my zero-tolerance approach. Along with lily beetles, this is about the only creature I


The greater bulb fly

By Richard Jones on 26/05/2010 11:52:22

the slightly scruffy-looking worker bees now just starting to forage.I must admit that I take great glee in finding it in my garden, but some horticulturalists may not be quite so enthusiastic. Its English name, the greater bulb fly, gives away its secret


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