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Gardening

wildlife in the garden

(94 Posts)
shysal Sat 04-Jun-11 09:40:35

I would love to hear what wildlife people have in their gardens, and how they encourage the animals.
I put food out for the badgers, which stops them digging up the garden. This also attracts foxes with cubs, muntjac, squirrels, a pheasant with 6 wives,and of course small birds. Apart from the deer nibbling my cabbages, there is little damage and great entertainment watching them all. If the bowls become empty I see noses pressed to my french window begging for more.I do not put out too much as I think they may become lazy and not eat a balanced diet in the wild.

whenim64 Sun 15-Jul-12 15:33:44

The squirrels are having a banquet in my garden! Whilst I answered the front door, they have marauded through my strawberry patch and swiped all my ripe strawberries. Talk about hit and run - it took them all of two minutes. One cheeky squirrel has been sat on the fence eating them whilst my dog barks at it. They have left one for me! That'll teach me to remember to put the netting back. smile

Anagram Sun 15-Jul-12 15:40:46

We have a couple of squirrels that visit our garden. Recently one of them has been very busy burying the peanuts that fall from the bird feeder in various parts of our lawn! He's even planted a couple in the flowerpots on the patio - I watched him do it! (I wouldn't mind, but they never remember where they've left them come winter!)

JessM Sun 15-Jul-12 16:10:59

We don't really have them round here much. Trees not big enough in MK maybe.
Heard a funny noise at 11pm the other night - its 2 fox cubs and their mother, cavorting in the pouring rain. Then one of them sat and stared anxiously at the road, wondering perhaps if it was about to follow mum across a large river or a solid surface. I would not call them "urban" foxes as we are 5 minutes from open countryside. But it was bin night, as mum, no doubt, was aware.

jeni Sun 15-Jul-12 16:12:53

I had a couple until a certain git murdered them angry

goldengirl Sun 15-Jul-12 16:16:06

We've been overtaken by starlings just recently. The fat balls and particularly a large fat cylinder seem to be the attractions. The funny thing is I took away the fat balls from the bird table originally because no bird seemed to enjoy them and then I thought I'd give them another go and just now we had 10 starlings jostling for position. The woodpecker has come too along with a variety of tits - never sure which ones are which type - and of course Sam and Samantha Squirrel who vie with the tits over the peanuts. Meal worms - another food that until now has been ignored - seem to be the favourite of blackbirds. The GC are fascinated by all this toing and froing.
The spiders are venturing indoors once again. I suppose they don't like the weather either but they get sucked up in the spider catcher and out they go!

AlisonMA Sun 15-Jul-12 17:25:14

We have squirrels and the occassional fox. Also all the usual garden birds plus doves but mostly its the bluetits who enjoy the fat balls and seeds we put out on our balconies.

Just last week for the first time we found out why one of the fat ball feeders was emptying so quickly, we have a woodpecker who is so beautiful. We watch him for ages.

A couple of weeks ago we had a baby bluetit on the rail with a parent flying up and down to the feeder and feeding baby. It was old enough to fly but not old enough to feed itself. A lovely 20 minutes before they flew away.

jeni Sun 15-Jul-12 17:31:45

We used to badgers and foxes and deer before I had my fence!

granjura Sun 15-Jul-12 17:51:10

In garden lots of birds : redstarts, tree sparrows, Merlins, fieldfares, nuthatches, bats, butterflies, bees, newts, dragonflies and hummingbird moths and so many more. In back field hares, deer, chamois, badgers, foxes and wild boar, and in woods at the back, the occasional wolf and lynx, capercaillie, black woodpeckers and many types of owls, including the eagle owl.

whenim64 Sun 15-Jul-12 23:29:46

An eagle owl! How lucky you are granjura. Magnifcent birds. I have baby tawny owls in the wood behind my house. I hear them hissing whilst their parents are hooting late at night.

crimson Sun 15-Jul-12 23:33:31

Years ago we saw a hummingbird moth when we were doing a Eurocamp holiday [I think we were somewhere in Italy]. We had no idea what it was but my kids [and me] were fascinated by it.

dahlia Wed 01-Aug-12 20:36:11

We have a large toad who makes his/her way up the steps each night and squats in the same place in one corner. He was here last summer, then seemed to go away, but the cry went up a month ago "Farquarh is back" (excuse spelling, we named him after the silly prince in "Shrek"). It may of course be an entirely different toad each time, but we like to think he has returned to his usual sitting spot, and so do our granddaughters.
The squirrel has had two young ones this year, and they have absolutely no fear, chomping away on spilled bird seed beneath the feeder. I know they are a pest, destroying bark on trees, but they are so cheeky!
Young robins dotted about the garden now, and one older robin who stands at the door to the greenhouse, berating me until I provide some suet bits. He even knows when I'm in the polytunnel and stares through the polythene - once again, could be more than one with the same habits!

jeni Wed 01-Aug-12 20:45:32

Tell the squirrel to keep away from here! The old git shoots them for sport!

whitewave Wed 01-Aug-12 20:46:35

watching the birds feeding this morning whilst drinking an early cuppa and whoosh! what I think was a hawk of some sort took a sparrow - not a very good start to the day really as I nurture my sparrows and starlings as they are decreasing so drastically in numbers. Poor little thing.

flowerfriend Wed 01-Aug-12 21:48:31

I live in a rather old and neglected small village in SW France and have a very small garden so not a great deal of wild-life there although I do love the humming-bird moths. The real wild-life is at dusk and if you have minimum lighting on and a window open because then the bats will venture in. And some of them are extra small. I don't know their names. They will hang on to the backs of paintings or large photos - you think one has flown there and you wonder at how small they are and that they can disappear behind a picture and when you go to look you find that there are three there.

jeni Wed 01-Aug-12 21:58:33

Pippistrelles?

flowerfriend Wed 01-Aug-12 22:08:45

Yes probably but wasn't sure of the spelling. Thank you. All is not well with the bat population as there are far fewer than when we moved here twelve years ago. Something to do with gentrification of a few properties perhaps.

goldengirl Thu 02-Aug-12 21:47:29

DH and GS dug a very small pond in a corner of the garden. The rain filled it and when I looked a little frog looked back at me! We have an overgrown pond just outside our sitting room window and we keep it overgrown - brambles and the like - so the GC don't go near it. A couple of frogs were poking their heads out of the algae. It's amazing what creatures will accept as 'home'.

Joan Fri 03-Aug-12 07:31:35

We are having an unusually long and cold winter here in the so-called sub -tropics. It is 1 degree c at night and 21c at midday, so my paw paws are very slow to ripen. I had one yellow one though, and was going to pick it today, BUT a flying fox or a possum got it first. It was half eaten on the ground this morning, so my chickens got the left-overs.

Also, something ate all my cauliflowers at night - no idea what. So once again the chickens win, getting the cauli leaves.

Oh well, at least we don't get the snake problem in winter. Wish I had a peacock: apparently snakes don't like them and stay away. We've had some nice bright green lorikeets flying around, which is always a cheerful sight.

Annobel Fri 03-Aug-12 07:51:22

Have you heard peacocks, Joan? We once left a camp site because of the din they made as soon as it was light! Don't wish that upon yourself. grin

Joan Fri 03-Aug-12 08:45:29

Oh dear - how awful. Not to worry - no chance of getting one!!

GillieB Fri 03-Aug-12 10:07:36

I do have a peacock - well, a visiting one, anyway. He came to see me a short while ago when I was putting out the washing. (He loves sunflower hearts). Yes, he is noisy occasionally, but only at the time that he has his tail. His feathers will soon start falling out and then his voice goes - and doesn't come back until February when he starts growing his tail again.

For the first time for a couple of years we have seen a red squirrel in the garden - cue my making sure that the cat (even though he is now 14) is in.

Someone mentioned a sparrowhawk a little while ago. I was in the conservatory with my GS a couple of weeks ago and one swooped down and took a blue tit - very upsetting for us both.

This year I have had siskins in the garden for the first time for ages, too; everything seems to love the sunflower hearts - bullfinches, goldcrests, chaffinches, greenfinches, etc., and the blackbirds pick up the remains from underneath. One of my robins also tries to eat at the feeder - he's getting better at it!

crimson Fri 03-Aug-12 16:18:48

A peacock that escaped from a local pub terrorised our street a few years back. The lady whose garage roof he had taken up residence on was scared to leave her house. Had to get an expert to come and catch him eventually. They do sound like the wailing of lost souls, don't they.

Joan Sun 05-Aug-12 02:17:29

You should hear sulphur crested cockatoos flying overhead - worse even than crows. Never heard a peacock though - I don't think I want to!!

Bags Sun 05-Aug-12 07:52:11

You could get a peahen instead, joan.

Bags Sun 05-Aug-12 07:55:22

PS 21°C sounds like a pretty good summer temperature to me. We rarely get that.

And I LOVE crisp, sunshiny mornings smile. Miised them in Thailand sad. The two very cold winters we had recently (not the last one which was dull and damp) were lovely and sunny and everyone was more cheerful in spite of all the ice.