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I have been honoured by a pair of blackbirds who are now nest building in my wisteria.


The robins are in a feeding frenzy at the minute, so their young must only be a couple of days from fledging,

when their previous family fledged they left the garden and I never saw them again.


The sparrows have taken to giving the fat balls a good hiding,

and the youngsters no longer need any feeding from their parents.


The runner beans have finally started to show, they are about four inches above ground, they will grow a few inches per day when conditions are good, which is fast and furious growth for a garden.

The peas are being crowded by a blessed chickweed (brought in with the compost) and with all the pea sticks it's not easy to keep them weed free.

The bright yellow in amongst the rhododendrun bushes in Dulwich park are scented azaleas, they're about over now but are highly perfumed.

Honeysuckle is about due and the lilac is gorgeous too.


Cow parsely bbug you can keep it and it's scent,

the only thing it was good for by late August was pea-shooters, by that time it's main stem had a large inside diameter although we never used peas we used hawthorn berries.

I seem to have stumbled upon a bumble bee nest while removing an old shed in my garden, its under the platform, easy to get to, I have temporarily halted procedings because I would like to if possible not harm the nest- move it somewhere else or would anyone be interested in collecting and removing.


Anyone with any advice?


J

The baby robin twitted around as I dug up some of the garden whilst the parents perched nearby, it makes me feel chuffed that they have succeeded.


The next ones will be the blackbirds, but not for a couple of weeks or so as they only finished nest building last week.


The great tits just disappeared with their family a week ago and I haven't seen them since.

Had to replace a couple of the tomato plants since the slugs or snails did their worst, so I placed some of the bright blue (cake sprinkles they look like) stuff to give them a hard time.


I have had a crop of 2 robins well thats as far as I know, if I see more than that I shall be delighted to gloat, said he smugly.


I tried the first radish from the 'guttering bed', phew it was hot, I hope they cool down with age.


The apples are forming on the trees now and the blackberry is in bloom, also the bees are in attendance which is good.


The bees seem to like the blue gentian it's always buzzing so it must issue lots of nectar.

I remember kids in the street and at school, having it painted on various parts of their anatomy as an antiseptic, which the scientists extract from the gentian root.

My garden is full of baby birds - green and goldfinches, great and bluetits, sparrows & robins.


True to form, a couple of adult starlings introduced a large posse of juveniles into the garden yesterday and left them there. I had to give up on fat feeders at this time of year last year cause they turned the garden into a warzone.


Apart from that, everything is coming up roses ;-)

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