I thought it is time for a new blog post after being quiet all summer. I created my wildlife pond in September last year (if you want to see how I have done it have a look
here) and it has developed really well. The pond plants have grown a lot and the pond is full of life; not just frogs and newts but numerous other small creatures such as water beetles, snails, water fleas, water boatmen and pond skaters. The pond is also a nice place for foxes, hedgehogs and birds to come for a drink, the latter also like to take a bath.
Follow me on a journey through the year to see how the pond has changed and what wildlife I have seen.
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A cold and misty morning in February |
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The first frogspawn appears at the beginning of March |
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More frogspawn! |
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The tadpoles have hatched at the end of March |
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A large water beetle is visiting the pond |
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Everything is looking much greener at the end of April |
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Tadpoles are growing fast |
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Pond skaters are skidding around on the water surface, waiting for hapless insects to fall into the water |
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A frog is watching me |
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Geum coccineum is flowering at the end of April |
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Ragged robin (Lychnis flos-cuculi) is starting to flower as well |
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The wildlife pond in May |
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Ragged robin looks nice at the pond margin |
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Siberian iris (Iris sibirica) is flowering in the bog garden adjacent to the pond |
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In June blue damselflies arrive |
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The damselflies like to sit on the iris leaves |
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A four-spotted chaser is waiting for some insects to grab and eat |
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The pond at the end of June |
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The pygmy water lily, which I rescued from the old pond, is flowering |
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An interesting pond visitor, a leech, has arrived out of nowhere. I think this is one of the leeches in the genus Glossiphonia which suck body fluids from snails and other soft-bodied invertebrates |
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Here yo can see that the leech is a female as she carries her offspring around underneath the belly |
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The pond at the beginning of July |
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Frogs are in and out of the pond, hunting for insects in the surrounding borders but come back to the pond to rehydrate |
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A large dragonfly larva, which are voracious predators |
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The pond at the end of July, with self-seeded ragged robin flowering again |
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Common darters have paired up, on top is the male, holding the female by the neck |
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Common daters ready to lay eggs on plants just below the pond surface |
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August is hot and dry and many animals, including wasps, come to the pond to drink |
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The pond in August, with Gaura lindheimeri flowering in the background |
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Mares tail, marsh cinquefoil and water lily give a pretty picture |
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This Common dater male is defending the pond as his territory |
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The pond in October, many plants are slowly winding down and are preparing for winter now |
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November brings the first proper frost, the pond has a thin layer of ice, plants are dormant and many of the pond animals are less active now or are hibernating at the bottom of the pond |
Soon the cycle will start again and everything will spring back into life.
The pond was one of the best things I created so far, it has given me so much joy and so much to see and discover. I love to just sit at the edge of the pond and watch what is going on. The pond has also given many pond animals a new home and is an important source of water for mammals and birds. I hope I could give you some inspiration to build a pond yourself. If you already have a pond you know what I am talking about :-).
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