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How to Create a Butterfly Garden - gardencentreguide.co.uk
gardencentreguide.co.uk
11.09.2024 / 09:00

How to Create a Butterfly Garden

Creating a butterfly garden is a rewarding way to bring vibrant life into your outdoor space while supporting local ecosystems. Butterflies are not only beautiful creatures; they are also crucial pollinators that contribute to the health of plants and flowers. A well-planned butterfly garden can attract various species, turning your backyard into a lively, colourful haven. This guide will walk you through the essential steps to create your own butterfly garden, ensuring you can enjoy the sight of these enchanting insects right near you.

5 Reasons Why Your Garden Could Benefit from a Pond - gardencentreguide.co.uk
gardencentreguide.co.uk
09.09.2024 / 01:19

5 Reasons Why Your Garden Could Benefit from a Pond

Have you ever thought about installing a pond in your garden? A pond can offer numerous advantages and serves more purposes than just being a decorative feature. Whether you have a spacious garden or a modest area, a pond can be a valuable addition. Here are five reasons why your garden might benefit from having a pond:

Weed Watch: Bristly Greenbrier - gardengatemagazine.com
gardengatemagazine.com
27.08.2024 / 17:06

Weed Watch: Bristly Greenbrier

Weed Watch: Bristly Greenbrier Do you recognize this common garden weed? Learn how to deal with bristly greenbrier here. Bristly greenbrier (Smilax hispida) What bristly greenbrier looks like

Should gardeners welcome all wildlife to their gardens? - gardenersworld.com - China - Britain - South Africa
gardenersworld.com
23.08.2024 / 10:16

Should gardeners welcome all wildlife to their gardens?

I heard a rustling behind me and turned to see a huge tortoise disappearing under a shrub! That was 25 years ago in South Africa. I was thrilled to see the creature but my fellow gardeners quickly loaded it onto a wheelbarrow bound for the veld (the open grassland) beyond the garden.

Garden Wildlife Identifier: Caterpillars - gardenersworld.com - France
gardenersworld.com
15.08.2024 / 15:39

Garden Wildlife Identifier: Caterpillars

The name ‘caterpillar’ comes from the old French word chatepelose, which means ‘hairy cat’. Caterpillars are the eating and growing stage of butterflies and moths. Many are green but others are intricately patterned, which makes them straightforward to identify.

Effective Strategies for Safe Wasp Nest Removal - gardencentreguide.co.uk
gardencentreguide.co.uk
12.08.2024 / 12:05

Effective Strategies for Safe Wasp Nest Removal

Encountering a wasp nest on your property can be quite alarming. These nests, often built in hidden or hard-to-reach places, can pose a significant risk, especially if you or your family members have allergies to stings. A wasp nest is typically constructed from paper-like material that wasps create by chewing wood fibres mixed with their saliva. Knowing where these nests are most commonly found can help in planning an effective wasp nest removal strategy.

Wildlife watch: Elephant hawk-moth - gardenersworld.com
gardenersworld.com
01.08.2024 / 12:19

Wildlife watch: Elephant hawk-moth

One of our most striking moths, the elephant hawk-moth is a large species, mainly golden green but with bright pink patterning on its body and wings. It’s named after its caterpillar, which has large, fake eye spots and is said to look like an elephant.

Rain Gardens as Wildlife Habitat - hgic.clemson.edu - Usa
hgic.clemson.edu
22.07.2024 / 13:23

Rain Gardens as Wildlife Habitat

An increase in development and urban sprawl has created a need to develop more wildlife-friendly landscapes. All wildlife need food, shelter (cover), water, and space to survive. A rain garden can fulfill some of those needs by providing habitat typically lacking in an urban or backyard environment. A rain garden is a landscaped depression designed to capture stormwater runoff from impervious surfaces such as roofs and roads and runoff from compacted turfgrass. See HGIC Factsheet 1864:Rain Garden Plants: Introduction for additional information on rain gardens.

Wildlife watch: Speckled bush-cricket - gardenersworld.com
gardenersworld.com
01.07.2024 / 10:53

Wildlife watch: Speckled bush-cricket

The speckled bush-cricket is a small, bright green cricket that gets its name from its all-over covering of black speckles. It has short wings, long, thin antennae and a dark orange stripe on its back (the male has a thicker stripe than the female). The female has a long, curved ovipositor (egg-laying tube). The speckled bush cricket cannot fly, but gets around by jumping, using its powerful back legs.

Stephanie’s Wildlife Haven in New Hampshire - finegardening.com
finegardening.com
26.06.2024 / 09:29

Stephanie’s Wildlife Haven in New Hampshire

Hey GPODers! No preamble from me today, Stephanie included a beautiful description with her submission so we’re jumping right in:

Wildlife watch: Long-tailed tit (Carduelis carduelis) - gardenersworld.com
gardenersworld.com
01.06.2024 / 11:05

Wildlife watch: Long-tailed tit (Carduelis carduelis)

The long-tailed tit (Carduelis carduelis) has blush, black and white colouring with a long tail, which is longer than its body. Usually seen in small family groups, it has a bouncy flight and a ‘deet-deet’ call. It’s common in parks and gardens, where it eats invertebrates, particularly the eggs of moths and butterflies. In gardens it will visit feeders for peanuts and suet.

Wildlife watch: Orange-tip butterfly - gardenersworld.com
gardenersworld.com
03.05.2024 / 14:26

Wildlife watch: Orange-tip butterfly

The orange-tip is one of the first butterflies of the year to emerge and can be found nectaring on spring flowers such as bluebells and cuckoo flower. The male is white with orange wing tips while the female has black wing tips – both sexes have beautiful mottled underwings, which are visible when mating and resting. After mating the female lays eggs on the flower stalks of cuckoo flower and hedge mustard, but in gardens may also lay on honesty and sweet rocket.

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