Gardens Illustrated Magazine

OUT OF SIGHT

any gardeners now actively garden with wildlife in mind. A welcome development, but what does the gardener hope to get out of it? Is it enough simply to know that wildlife is thriving in your garden, or do you have to see visible evidence of that? The problem is that the wildlife you will see in your garden is only the tip of the iceberg; the bees, birds and butterflies are only about five per cent of even the larger inhabitants of the average garden. Most of the earthworms, slugs, snails, woodlice, centipedes,

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