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Building a pond

By Richard Jones on 07/07/2010 17:25:07

we'll need to back fill a bit more.We're going to have to put up a sign explaining that the pond will not have fish in it. It's a wildlife pond, and in my book fish and wildlife do not mix. And it's unlikely that frogs or toads will find their way


Out of danger

By Richard Jones on 28/11/2007 10:12:02

of the shieldbugs of the county which was later published by the Surrey Wildlife Trust. The box bug is now known throughout most of that county and has also started to appear in neighbouring Kent, Sussex and Middlesex.The reason for its genuine increase and spread


Weevils

By Richard Jones on 16/01/2008 11:29:00

and insects abound. There's an increasing list of scarce and unusual insects turning up there.On 26 June I was there on a blistering hot day and the whole place was abuzz with wildlife. Two insects stuck in my mind. One was a tiny, but very pretty, picture


Grey squirrels

By Richard Jones on 17/06/2009 18:19:39

on the sills for the half-tame squirrel. We duly obliged.On their return we got to chatting about gardens and wildlife, what the swifts were up to, how many stag beetles had come flying over. When talk turned to the half-tame squirrel I was told, very


Japanese knotweed

By Richard Jones on 19/08/2009 11:07:22

on the broad leaves, Fallopia is more or less sterile when it comes to wildlife. But this may be about to change. I notice that there are rumours of importing a small but pretty Japanese insect, the psyllid bug Aphalara idatori, to try and control the knotweed


Fungi

By Richard Jones on 16/09/2009 11:45:25

on to their precious cargo. I'm not too worried about the grass, but I am concerned that without the damp September air, will I get to see any autumnal wildlife?I photographed these ink caps, Coprinus comatus, a few years ago in Brenchley Gardens in Nunhead


Garden birds and their predators

By Richard Jones on 03/03/2010 10:49:02

I'm just back from a weekend visiting an old friend in Banwell, near Weston-Super-Mare. Always envious of his rambling house and large walled garden, we got to talking over garden wildlife and the troubles of traipsing fox dung through the kitchen


Butterflies in the garden

By Richard Jones on 14/04/2010 08:53:07

As usual, during the Easter holiday break, we find ourselves watching garden wildlife in sunnier climes -- in the Isle of Wight. At St Lawrence, on the southern tip of the Island, not only are we significantly nearer the equator than East Dulwich


Dragonfly nymphs

By Richard Jones on 29/09/2010 08:21:57

that wildlife would find it soon enough. And they have.Peering into the now clear water, after the initial algal bloom and water-flea dance auditions, I can see some squat mud-coloured gargoyles resting menacingly just below the water line. They are dragonfly


Stag beetles

By Richard Jones on 08/06/2011 16:38:55

disadvantage.I must make sure I send my record to the London Wildlife Trust’s stag beetle survey. Mr Beetle flew off into the dusk. Good luck to him.


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