Garlic has many well known health benefits, it’s a natural antibiotic and good for the heart and circulation system, but did you know that it can be healthy for your garden as well? Used as a companion plant, and if it is planted near roses and raspberries, garlic will improve the growth and health of your garden plants.
Garlic also deters some beetles and aphids, it is easy to grow and each clove you plant will produce a full head of garlic which can have 8 to 20 cloves per head.
To get started planting garlic first purchase the garlic variety of your choice. Watch out for garlic bought from grocery stores because it often has antisprouting chemicals added to it, so be sure to buy your garlic from a garden centre or online from a site that sells garic for planting.
Read more: Grow your own garlic
A coalition of wildlife charities are asking UK residents if they would volunteer to carry out a national ’stock take’ of any reptiles and amphibians in their UK gardens.
So whether you have frogs or toads, newts or slow worms, the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO), Froglife and the Herpetological Conservation Trust (HCT) want to hear from you.
The conservationists hope the stock taking survey will bring together amateur wildlife watchers, including birdwatchers, gardeners, hands-on conservation volunteers as well as the general public, and the results will contribute to knowledge about where frogs, toads, newts, snakes and lizards can be found in the UK and allow the scientists a clearer understanding to how important our gardens are for wilflife conservation.
The survey results will also be used to see how the local amphibian and reptile populations may be responding to a variety of threats, including habitat loss, disease and garden chemicals.
“The good thing about this is that we’re using such a wide number of people so we’re getting information that we never would have done in the past. We’re hoping to get over 20,000 people getting involved,” said Jules Howard from Froglife.
The volunteers are being asked to complete a simple recording form, marking off species they have seen and answering straightforward questions about their gardens, such as whether they have a pond, whether they use pesticides or whether or not they have a compost heap.
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