It is a great time of the year for being outdoors; a huge variety of insects and other life in all shapes and sizes, colours, functions.
They are everywhere all the time, are they are marvellously diverse.
Maybe it is all the coffee in the ground that has caused all this activity? Maybe it was the worm tea?
Maybe its just that I’m paying attention now…
Let’s start with a family favourite – the spiked and furry worm.
A shiny green fly rests on a Nasturtium leaf. A great contrast of greens.
One of the more bizarre photos I’ve taken for a while. A couple of moths in an appropriate Spring time embrace. Delightful orange and black wings, their bodies coated with orange tinged hair.
A bag of dried leaves is all it took for a colony of ants to make a home. They seem to be busy moving their eggs around, not sure from where or why.
All those little feet over dried leaves could be heard, so I sat there awhile and listened and watched them go about their business.
I’ve had more luck with the Brussels Sprouts as a bee attractor than as a source of food! They really go for those little yellow flowers, as much as aphids go for their leaves.
And nothing better than providing a nice welcoming environment for these little guys. Insects need a place to stay just like the rest of us, and these wooden logs are a great way to do it.
All you need to do is drill a few holes in a piece of wood.
Yet more proof that ladybirds have visited my garden this year!
And her cousin was on the other side of the garden, happily eating aphids from an apple tree.
What kinds of diversity you have come across in your garden?
Related articles
- Aphids Control (groundtoground.org)
- Bee Thankful: Green Lacewings (fldpi.wordpress.com)
- It’s a small, small, small world… (gcvhorticulture.wordpress.com)
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It’s always nice to see a garden teeming with teeny tiny critters 🙂
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Thanks for stopping by Sally. I’ll keep adding to this post as more little critters find their way to me.
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Great photos, and those moths are a classic. Always loved the natural world and those small creatures in their moments of just living!
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Hi Matthew – That is one of the best parts of gardening I think. You share some of the world with other things, just going about their business.
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