Blog https://www.shirlsgardenwatch.co.uk/ + Follow Blog Visitors beware… this blog contains way too much chat, photos and video on garden plants, birds and wildlife. It also goes wandering on visits to gardens and nature reserves! Twitter Followers 595 Frequency 11 posts/year Since Nov ...
For those of us with vegetable and pollinator gardens, flowers and fruits are abundant and native wildlife abounds, reveling in the natural bounty we provide for them. Eastern Tiger Swallowtail on Common Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) This time of year, I awake every day with eagerness to see ...
Pollinator Friendly Gardening: Gardening for Bees, Butterflies and Other Pollinators offers much to the gardener wishing to make meaningful changes, big or small, to welcome and support these vital creatures. After many years of adding and enhancing habitat value in my own gardens, I wanted to ...
and are denoted by square, triangle or circle symbols. Gaps along each transect represent sites at which cameras were stolen. Insert shows the study area in relation to South Africa
in your pursuit of the perfect butterfly image. Meadows with wildflowers growing in abundance are great places for photographing butterflies but please don't trespass on other people's property. You could also visit one of the many nature reserves or public gardens found right across the UK. ...
Rosie H Biggleswade, UK410 contributions 1 Lovely and quiet Dec 2019 Had been to this area over 30 years ago, it has changed a lot and for the better. The only slight upset was that we first went on a Friday to find that the drive through the preserv...
Importantly, much of the data used in this population assessment came from infrared cameras set up and maintained by local people, such as the community in the Valley of the Cats. Video Player 00:00 00:00 Setting up an infrared camera in the Valley of the Cats. Footage courtesy of ShanShu...
WAB students signing the “Pledge for Nature” And already they have identified an area of the campus to “re-wild”, built ten special nest boxes for the Beijing Swift, to be erected this week ahead of the birds’ arrival in mid-April, set up infrared cameras around campus to monitor...
I got one of my cameras set up on my tripod at the viewpoint I wanted to use but rather understandably I then had to wait more than an hour and a half before I could get some shots without any people in view. The wait was no problem: The sun was just nicely warm and the mosquit...