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Wildlife (24)
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Richard Jones (28)

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More than 12 months (28)

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Godshill Model Village

By Richard Jones on 16/04/2008 11:57:00

to chalk up 15 of my 124 target actions. These are mostly by the simple expedient of not cutting the grass, not winter deadheading, clearing out the pond when I repaired it and by having more than my fair share of thickets.The thickets are obviously paying


No angels on Peckham Rye

By Richard Jones on 29/10/2008 14:27:40

.Down on the Rye everything is starting to look very autumnal and the leaves are building up into treacherously slippery mounds. The trees still hold some secrets though. In 1767, a 9- or 10-year-old William Blake saw an oak tree full of angels here. The angel oak


Insects in late-autumn

By Richard Jones on 05/11/2008 16:48:18

, this male keeps trying to stab me with the end of his tail in mock attack. The males don’t last long, after mating they and the last remaining workers die, leaving just the fertilized queens to live through winter, hibernating under loose bark, in log piles


Ladybirds

By Richard Jones on 19/11/2008 09:15:16

isn't very old, it's not more than 20cm in diameter at the base, but the bark is rough and gnarled enough to provide the odd nook and cranny for overwintering ladybirds.Surprisingly, these are not the recent alien invader Harmonia axyridis


Garden wildlife and autumn tidying

By Richard Jones on 13/10/2010 08:01:15

well and good, but they have also got to have somewhere to live - shelter. When their 'visit' is over, they have to go home to - you guessed it - shelter. Night-time roosting is important, but at this time of year over-wintering sanctuary is paramount


Newts

By Richard Jones on 19/01/2011 08:12:11

After the wet and dismal weekend, I take a tentative stroll in the garden on a clear and bright Tuesday morning, and discover the first newt of the year sitting motionless at the bottom of the pond. I know it has been down there all winter


Bees and bee flies

By Richard Jones on 30/03/2011 17:38:43

go through this behaviour in autumn, and only the fertilised queens (females) survive through winter. In the 'solitary' species, the bees develop in their mainly subterranean nests, and although the grubs may finish feeding on the stored stocks


Wasps

By Richard Jones on 11/05/2011 08:04:48

the small golfball-sized embryo nest with its 15-20 cells in a single paper comb. After she has laid her first 15-20 eggs in these, she must forage for caterpillars, flies, aphids and other insects to feed to the grubs that hatch.This is a vulnerable time


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