3. Hedges
The wonders of a garden hedge. Brett Westwood and Phil Gates's investigation into common garden wildlife continues. From July 2013.
Ever wondered what causes the semi-circular holes in your rose bushes, and what is it that raids the honeysuckle for nectar?
Well the answers to these garden mysteries are revealed as Brett Westwood is joined by naturalist Phil Gates in a garden near Bristol.
And with the help of recordings by wildlife sound recordist Chris Watson and Geoff Sample, they offer a practical and entertaining guide to the wildlife which you're most likely to see and hear in a garden hedge.
Hedgerows provide food, shelter and nesting sites for birds, climbing frames for plants and food for insects. Male wrens build multiple nests (often in hedges) and the female then selects one in which to lay her eggs.
Wrens are also notable for their song; it's a very loud explosive song for such a small bird "The whole bird seems to vibrate".
Brett and Phil then turn their attention from song to scent; and to the honeysuckle which grows in this garden around the porch, but is often entwined in hedges and likely to attract the lovely Twenty-plume Moth - so called because "their wings look like beautiful Chinese fans ... and each wing is divided into what look like little feathers", and although it's called the Twenty-plume Moth, it actually has 24 plumes, six on each of the four wings; a really exquisite moth.
They also look for signs of leafcutter bees, before finally discussing hedgehogs, the ardent adventures of one particular male in Phil's garden, their extraordinarily noisy courtship, and the importance of hedges as highways and corridors between gardens.
Producer Sarah Blunt
First broadcast on 麻豆官网首页入口 Radio 4 in July 2013.
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