Lessons from unlikely places
I feel chastened this week, by anÌýanimated character.Ìý You see, I saw the beautiful animated ÌýfilmÌý at the weekend.ÌýÌýIn it, when not being terrorised by people with buttons for eyes, Coraline is constantly nagging her parents to get outside and sort their new garden out, but they're too busy writing about gardening to actually do any.Ìý It all sounded a little familiar.
In the past week or two, I've been too busy reading other people's experiences andÌýgetting sidetracked while researching their questionsÌýto actually do any gardening myself, bar the odd water and checking nothing was dying.
When I finally took some time out with my veg,Ìýa mystery presented itself.Ìý In the window box I inherited from the , there's been a suspicious flattening of my carrots.Ìý Did I, like Coraline, have a sinister visitor from another world,Ìýcalling onÌýmy balcony?ÌýÌýIt looked to me as ifÌýSomething has been using the carrot tops as a bed.Ìý FiveÌýfloors up,Ìýthere aren't many suspects, and the flattened area looks suspiciously pigeon-shaped.Ìý Is it related to Sara'sÌýpigeon perhaps?ÌýÌýOr am I just being paranoid? Your suggestions welcome...
Talking of unwelcome guests, thanks for the comment on my last post from thelovelycheesybeans asking what to do to stop foxes fouling the courgettes.Ìý Being a zoologist by trade I'm tempted to say lucky you for having a resident fox, but I don't think that's the answer you're after.Ìý
You might want to check with fertiliser you're using - if it's a bonemeal-based one it'll be very attractive to foxes, so changing to something else might help.Ìý Apart from that, take a look at - she's been talking to a man who deters foxes for a living.
P.S. If you want to read a blog by a fascinating man who really knows what happens in a small patch, have a lookÌýat blog, run by Patrick.Ìý I made a film with Patrick for Springwatch a couple of years back, and he is truly an amazing man with a real passion for things at a tiny scale.
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