‘No-mow May’ was a thing this year, with gardeners
encouraged not to mow their lawns for a month to let wildflowers bloom for
pollinators. We always leave the cowslip
patch unmown until well into summer anyway, and this year an area of grass
under the plum tree has been left to allow more of the orchids to flower; but
from the middle of the month we were away up north for nearly three weeks and
the whole lawn was more than a bit wild when we got back in early June. After a cold and dry April, May was cold and
wet, finishing with a warm spell, so the vegetation was decidedly luxuriant on
our return. A lot of cow parsley had
crept into the bed at the bottom of the garden, which was pretty but not to be encouraged,
though it did set off the last of the tulips (in the big pot by the
summerhouse) and the first of the alliums.
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| Tulips, alliums and cow parsley in the bottom border |
So one of the first jobs to be tackled when we got home was
to mow those parts of the lawn that were meant to be mown and to get things
back to normal. In the process, we
discovered that it wasn’t only the grass that had gone wild. On the trunk of the plum tree was a heaving
mass of honeybees.
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| The 'cast' on the plum tree |
Fortunately we have a
beekeeping neighbour, who was summoned to advise; he informed us that it wasn’t
a swarm but a ‘cast’ (don’t ask me the difference), apparently a group of bees
who have followed a queen bee to find a new home. There needs to be a certain (large) number of
bees for them to survive, and unless this lot started breeding fast, they would
die over winter. So our neighbour and
his friend, fully kitted out in case the bees turned nasty (in fact they were
extremely docile but you never know with bees), brought along a bee box and
scraped most of the cast, including the queen, into it; it was then lodged in
the lower branches of the plum tree for the other bees to find their way into
it. Some bees came out of the box, flew
over to the others on the tree trunk, and gave ‘come on guys the party’s here’
signals to get them to follow.
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| Preparing the box ,,, |
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| Getting it into the tree ,,,, |
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| ... now in place |
That was
two weeks ago now, and they’re still there, apparently reasonably happy but
possibly not reproducing fast enough. We’re
happy for them to stay if they can form a viable colony, but if not they will
be re-homed in another existing hive elsewhere in the village.
We’re just pleased that they thought our garden a good place
to live; maybe our ‘no-mow May’ helped!
When we got round to mowing the grass verge outside the
front of the house, we found more wildness: five early spotted orchids had
appeared in the grass there. They have
been carefully mown around; we hope they’ll seed about. Presumably they seeded in from the group in
our lawn, where we have early spotteds, pyramidal orchids and common twayblades
(a very un-showy orchid, one of which has sent up a tall green flower spike).
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| Early spotted orchid, in the verge |
It’s not only the bees and the orchids that have been
proliferating; our birds are busily feeding youngsters. The nestbox on the summerhouse wall has been
home to a bluetit family (the bluetits seem to have won the battle against the
great tits, although apparently it’s not unknown for one species to lay eggs in
the nest of the other); they didn’t seem too bothered by our using the
summerhouse for meals. The little ones
must have flown the nest in the past few days as activity round the nestbox has
ceased, and at least one youngster was being fed in the apple tree today. Down in the bottom of the garden and beyond
in the field margin there is also a family of wrens, several little ones
noisily following their parent for food, and a family of dunnocks; a robin also
searches for food for its little ones down there. The grass (and cow parsley stalks, and
nettles) in the field behind the summerhouse is still very long and provides
great cover for small birds. Up by the
house, the sparrows have several fledgelings, and a blackbird has been feeding
one (but only one – blackbird broods seem to have been very small here this
year) youngster.
Lunching in the garden yesterday (after a rainy and chilly
spell, it was a sunny day), I noticed something very small scampering across
the lawn. I went to investigate, and the
little creature hid under some foliage that the recent winds had blown out of
the plum tree. It stayed there long
enough for me to grab my phone, lift the foliage and take photos. It was a common shrew, one of our tiniest
mammals; it promptly scooted off and hid in the long grass under the tree, and
I let it be.
Common shrews are indeed
common, but not often seen, and certainly not running across a lawn in the
middle of the day!