this post was submitted on 27 Apr 2024
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UK Nature and Environment

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When the BBC's Katherine Latham made a pond with just a plant pot, some rocks and a few native pond plants, she was amazed at the speed wildlife moved in.

"I hope we get frogs and newts, and animals of all kinds," said my son, 11-year-old Billy, as we carefully prized apart the roots of a pond plant we were trying to split into three, before plopping them into the water.

It was a sunny Sunday at the beginning of March, in my back garden in Gloucestershire, UK, and my children and I were making three mini ponds. We'd taken three cheap plastic plant pots and dug two of them into the ground, and stood the third surrounded by plants. When then lined them with rocks and filled them with water, rocks and native pond plants.

We were hopeful wildlife would come but, at the same time, apprehensive that – in the midst of a biodiversity crisis – nothing would find its way to our little oases. Then, just one week later, we noticed spiders and insects had begun to visit. Ants were crawling about the edge. Hover flies, bumblebees and ladybirds flittered nearby.

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[–] [email protected] 14 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Until you get frogs and fish, who'll eat the mosquitoes.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 months ago

Even better: salamander larvae