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Wireworms

By Richard Jones on 18/02/2009 15:48:08

are getting ready for the big planting session after half-term.There are precious few bugs about still. A small cloud of diaphanous winter gnats flutters above the shed but all else is quiet, until I pull up a small groundsel plant. There, wriggling


The insects have gone berserk

By Richard Jones on 27/04/2011 11:03:05

For anyone who thought the cold winter might have been a bit harsh for wildlife, I hope the recent heatwave has been an eye-opener. I’ve certainly never seen so much insect life in April before. The garden has been awash with orange-tips, holly


Harlequin ladybirds

By Pippa Greenwood on 12/01/2011 17:58:20

For the last few years I've noticed large numbers of harlequin ladybirds (pictured, left) visiting my garden in summer, and then hibernating inside my window frames over winter.The window frames also provide winter shelter for lacewings and many


Bird baths

By Adam Pasco on 18/02/2008 10:44:00

Man cannot live by bread alone, and neither can birds! When it comes to garden bird care, food is not the only thing I consider on these cold winter mornings.Waking up to a thick layer of frost to scrape off the car windscreen before I could leave


Signs of spring

By Richard Jones on 17/03/2010 16:55:36

Spring has sprung. All at once. The guinea pig and his hutch are back outside. Shieldbugs, in their purple-brown winter colours, are sunbathing on the fence. The first bumblebee of the year, a queen buff-tailed, floated past and a male feather


Frogs, ponds and winterkill

By Kate Bradbury on 22/10/2010 15:54:52

In January I blogged about 'winterkill', after letters, emails and blog comments flooded in from gardeners who'd found dead frogs in their ponds. One commenter, Wishful Thinker, suggested I blog about winterkill before winter, so people can take


Feeding birds in summer

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

Feeding the birdsFeeding birds used to be a winter activity, from Christmas until the first spring flowers appeared. But birds need our help in the summer months just as much as during the winter.Because birds breed in the spring and early summer


Froghoppers on the hop

By Richard Jones on 19/12/2012 14:49:55

’re unlikely to have time to get another generation through to adulthood before the real winter arrives.Of course, they aren’t really consciously trying to do that. These are creatures of instinct, and they’re just reacting to one of the standard environmental


Tidying your garden in autumn

By Kate Bradbury on 15/10/2010 15:03:14

, froghoppers, moths, butterflies and bees. (The frogs I rescued and brought in.) I’m determined to make sure my garden provides the perfect home for wildlife over winter, and if I have to compromise a little on aesthetics, so be it. I've already made


Draining ponds

By Kate Bradbury on 09/04/2010 14:13:11

in May. Would they have checked for nesting birds?As gardeners we're conditioned to work with wildlife. We avoid tidying borders in winter, trimming hedges in nesting season, and are frequently reminded of the benefits of having a pond. But this message


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