The 2019 State of Nature report, written by a group of professionals from over 70 wildlife organisations, has been published and it will come as no surprise to anyone that the findings are stark. Sin
Goldfinches are busy feeding on the teasels and Burdocks that grow on our uncut margins.
If you haven’t done so for a while, then getting feeders clean is super-important to the health and survival of the birds which visit your garden.
Andrew Cooper, our guest blogger has been watching the butterflies in Devon
The wet weather had a diverse effect on our wheat harvest this year
As most people reading this will know, the songbird migrants which come to the UK to breed in the spring and summer aren’t species we can attract to our gardens with food, with the simple reason bei
Due to the wet summer, our crops are very lush and are in no hurry to ripen
Our guest blogger Phil Pickin has been looking out for nocturnal activities in his garden
Opening the kitchen curtains this morning, I was greeted with a view lit by a warming early sun. A scene more like Watership Down than a Devon valley. Rabbits everywhere, scampering and leaping aroun
July and August are perhaps the months where you enjoy the fruits of your labour in your wildlife garden rather than, well, carrying on with lots more labour. Therefore, with less to physically do un
This might be one of the more controversial topics we’ve covered in our bird of the month series, as whilst many of you reading this will rejoice in the spectacle of a sparrowhawk arriving at high s
Our sunflowers were sown this month, ready for their August display - weather permitting
If you asked most folk what they thought was the commonest bird in the UK, most would probably say the house sparrow. However, whilst that would have been true a number of decades ago, it certainly is