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Queen wasp

By Richard Jones on 10/04/2013 13:00:00

she rested in the warm day, then off she buzzed. Lovely.This, for me then, is the end of winter.


Roses and their pests

By Richard Jones on 27/02/2008 10:20:00

elbows whenever I go past. It's a tough old brute. So I have no worries at all that it is being attacked by a battalion of major garden pests.It's been very mild this winter so it's no surprise that things are already active. The new leaf shoots


RSPB Homes for Wildlife

By Richard Jones on 10/12/2008 12:12:12

My father, from whom I get my interest in wildlife, often bemoans the fact that there is nothing left in the countryside these days. He fondly remembers fields awash with butterflies and heavens full of skylarks. But he's never one bit surprised


Spiders

By Richard Jones on 25/02/2009 15:17:29

cycle, surviving the winter in the silk-cocooned egg stage, Tegenaria females can live for several years, a result of living in those sheltered voids and avoiding the extremes of wet and cold suffered by outdoor species.I once very cavalierly picked up


First butterflies of the year

By Richard Jones on 22/04/2009 10:03:56

an overwintering chrysalis. This butterfly is unique among our British species in that it hibernates in both caterpillar and chrysalis stage. Those that spent winter as a caterpillar will have a bit of catching up to do and should start emerging in May.On Sunday


Jersey Tiger moths

By Richard Jones on 05/08/2009 11:48:38

it does not flit from flower to flower like a butterfly. But it flies readily if disturbed from its not-very-camouflaged position on a leaf, wall, fence, window, car, no-parking sign, bollard or brightly coloured plastic bin full of winter salt/grit mix


Growing buddleja for butterflies

By Adam Pasco on 25/08/2009 09:04:04

I'm always looking to make my garden more appealing to wildlife, so I've been delighted by the number of peacock butterflies around this summer. My buddleja has put on a superb flower display that's lasted for weeks. If any shrub is going to provide


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


Dead frogs

By Kate Bradbury on 26/01/2010 15:33:09

. But others haven’t been so lucky.I asked Jules Howard at Amphibian and Reptile Conservation (ARC) what was going on. He explained that because male frogs often lie dormant at the bottom of ponds during winter, they’re prone to dying when the ponds freeze over


Derelict gardens

By Richard Jones on 24/11/2010 11:06:35

species, I did not get close enough), a cloud of winter gnats (Trichocera species) were dancing over the middle of the lawn, and several flies were dying like flies around the pond.I really value my garden wildlife, but I have to admit that it is not all


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