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Talkback: Garden wildlife and autumn tidying
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The secret to helping wildlife is to have a garden large enough to accommodate all the things you mention, Richard. I am very privileged to have such but it is anything but the norm in a big city. I do get great joy when I see a whole street of small front gardens all different however, as they are providing a range of habitats for the bees and butterflies. Some of them prefer the spring show, some summer and some look great in autumn with lots of berries and Michaelmas daisies. Here lies the solution - be an individual, tidy or untidy, in your garden and together the needs of the wildlife will be served.
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Everyone has a area that is sort of ignored. Cut and trim all you want, but move the trimmings to that unused area for the winter.
Works for us - and our neighbors aren't appalled with the "I don't care about my yard" look...
The fact that a relatively 'wild' garden attracts wildlife enhances the pleasure no end.
yesterday we had Coal Tits and Nuthatches on our seed feeder but what regularly entertains us most is our flock of House sparrows. There may be a shortage in London, good news, we have at least 50 living in and around our hedges. Bad news is we also have a resident Sparrowhawk and having seen that from about 4ft away I am very glad I am not a sparrow.
Visit http://www.allaboutrosegardening.com/Butterfly-Garden-Plan.html for some interesting facts about creating a natural home for them, to keep them in your garden.
I think birds, bats and squirrels are more than capable of lining their own nests. At the most, I'd suggest a handful of dry leaves. Anything more, and you do not know whether you are also introducing moulds, diseases or parasites.
Yet on the sticker on the back it said try if not satisfied a full refund would be given!
I have never heard of this before and have eaten the pumpkin flesh in homemade soup and I am still here!
Can anyone tell me if this is right that carving pumpkins are not edible?
Thank you for your comment. The most profound to date. I will take great pleasure in plagiarizing it horribly over the next few years.