Showing posts with label wasps nest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wasps nest. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Wildlife on the allotment




I thought our garden had a lot of wildlife, but our allotments are even better. Plot 8 has hedging all around the boundaries and a big sycamore tree at the top.  All of this provides shelter and food for the birds.  Outside and across the lane is the woods, which must be heaving with wildlife. We often sit with a cup of tea, quietly watching and bird spotting. We have seen, long tailed tits, blue tits, greenfinches, goldfinches, even grouse. The robin follows us around as we work, there are sparrows, blackbirds and chaffinches.  There are frogs and toads which we often come across when weeding, hiding under bricks or sheltering in a clump of big weeds. The pond has tadpoles early on, but our disappointment is always when we get a spell of dry weather and the pond dries up.

Plot 10b doesn't have much  in the way of hedging, although there is a buddleia and a holly, both of which are good shrubs to attract wildlife.  We are planting up a border there with perennial plants which will attract bees and butterflies and have put some climbing shrubs--ivy, honeysuckle, cotoneaster and clematis along the front to climb against the wire fence.  There are nettles and brambles on both plots, I get rid of those which encroach on our space, but like to leave a clump or two up near the fences where we don't grow anything.

The plots are buzzing with bees at the moment, there are ladybirds and we have started to spot butterflies.  At the moment we are seeing the orange tip butterfly which is mostly seen during May.  I often wonder what happens to it after May because we don't see it later on in the year.

Some of our wildlife though is not as welcome.  We have recently been troubled with moles and on arrival at the plots usually have a look around to see where they have dug up overnight. Their latest atrocity has been the seed beds where I have sown flowers for my cut flower patch.

Even more unwelcome visitors are the rats.  There have been lots of them recently. We see them in the communal manure heap on the lane, but also on our own plots around the compost bins. They have got very cheeky and don't seem the least bit frightened of us. It's good to see though that Ziggy our allotment cat is earning her keep--nearly every day last week we found a dead rat on the path.

Another unwelcome bit of  wildlife was spotted this week in the shed on plot 8.  It was a tiny grey ball like structure with a hole in the base, situated up near the ceiling of the shed.  We soon realised it was a wasp's nest after seeing a wasp going in through the hole.  It was carefully removed by my brave husband and placed in the woods across the lane well away from the plot.

After a week of seeing all these 'nasty' creatures, I was finally cheered up firstly by a pretty lacewing which flew gracefully past me into the sycamore tree, looking like a little fairy with its bright, lime green body and delicate, translucent wings. Secondly  I went to look at the pond and was overjoyed to see it was full of water again and there were the tadpoles swimming around happily, having grown much bigger since the last time I saw them.