ChatterBank0 min ago
Leg Up For...
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the butterflies & moths.
I noticed that my Buddlea bush is just beginning to come out in bloom,this morning. So I'm hoping this will attract more butterflies, bee's etc into the area, hover flies seem particularly scares this year, so I've allowed some areas of the lawns un-mown and introduced some wild flowers to become established.
The birds seem to be having a good year for raising chicks, robins, g s woodpeckers, great tits have done particularly well!.
I noticed that my Buddlea bush is just beginning to come out in bloom,this morning. So I'm hoping this will attract more butterflies, bee's etc into the area, hover flies seem particularly scares this year, so I've allowed some areas of the lawns un-mown and introduced some wild flowers to become established.
The birds seem to be having a good year for raising chicks, robins, g s woodpeckers, great tits have done particularly well!.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I do no mow May and yes, leave corners never mown and unweeded. I have to be a bit thoughtful of the neighbours though and dead head things like nettles ands the sow thistle that I grow for my tortoises. Oddly although I get a good selection of butterflies, they aren't interested in my buddleias. I get loads of bees and wasps too but my bug htels stand empty! BTW its suggested that buddleias are deadheaded once the flowers fade . Apparently the seed is not attractive to birds and it can be a pernicious weed in surrounding gardens and in the wild. Yes a good year for chicks of all kinds. I do feed them and put water out but my fruit bushes get pirated so next year I am going to have a proper fruit cage. I will still grow some things outside of it for the birds and my amelanchiers and rowans supply generously but I'd like some for myself! This autumn's other job is to turn out the pond. The heron cleared me out once too often so i took off the net and left it open to wildlife. Numpty that I am, I forgot about leaves and its pretty choked up. Still plenty of wildlife enjoying it but the loosestrife has gone wacko so big clear out once it has flowered.
Starlings, once common and wide spread, have become rare in many places but remain fairly strong in small pockets. I don't see them at all now.
I think they come back to feed in the same places, if they know where it is. I think the lack of leather jackets (crane fly larvae) has a lot to do with it.
I think they come back to feed in the same places, if they know where it is. I think the lack of leather jackets (crane fly larvae) has a lot to do with it.