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Talkback: Tidying your garden in autumn
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i think that we should learn to live with the wildlife in our gardens as it helps us and we help the wildlife not only that its great to be able to look out of the window and see all the different birds about on the feeders in your garden you help them they help you to get rid of the pests in return.me and my husband put in a pond early this year and weve had alot of wildlife in it already and weve got a frog which seems to love it in there .the only thing that upsets the frog is that all the birds that come in the garden they all have a drink and a bath in it.
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This year a have seen numerous frogs, the occasional toad, a dozen busy hedghogs and much more. But special - whilst harvesting onions I found a hawkmoth catapillar (onions left insitu!) and when trying to clear a pile of old hardcore and weeds behind the greenhouse, two young newts curled around one another. Truly their skin looked like velvet. The hardcore hasn't moved either!
I say leave alone where you can, or create a hidden environment if you have to be tidy - you can hide old garden pots etc behind a winter display of containers for example. A neat pile of logs can have pots, bracken, clippings etc within. Please give nature a hand!
http://www.mandysutter.com/reluctant-gardener-day-70-scarecrows/
Becky - perhaps you could buy/make a bird bath, so the birds don't scare the frogs?
Neil H - as I said in the blog, my garden is 4m², so it is practical in a small garden. It might lot look its best, but no garden looks as good in winter as in summer, and with daylight hours reduced in winter, we see our gardens a lot less anyway.
Kate
iv got starberrys and others