Monday, April 27, 2026

The Foxes Get Chinese Takeaway


We have one bluebell in our garden that isn't blue. It's a pinkbell. I know bluebells sometimes have color variations but this is a first for our garden, as far as I can remember.

I feel like I was busy as heck yesterday but when I told Dave's parents that on their regular weekly video-call, his mom said, "Oh, what did you do?" And I couldn't name anything that sounded very impressive! So I'm not sure where the time goes, but it does.

For one thing, I got my seedlings planted out, and that's a bigger deal than it sounds. There are only four or five of each type, but still, in our crowded garden, finding them a home was a challenge!


I put the cosmos and one zinnia in the long terra cotta planter that held the rescued primulas. (I saved the primulas too -- just moved them to a different pot.) Don't you love my ornamental rockwork? I know it looks like plant prison, but it's meant to keep the squirrels from digging up the seedlings.


Here's one of the sunflowers, complete with a copper slug ring (not very effective) to protect it. It's not great that our weather has been so dry, but at least it keeps down the slugs and snails.


And here are two little zinnias, with more pot shards to keep the squirrels at bay.

I am somewhat pessimistic about how well these tiny things will survive in our jungle of a garden, but at some point the plants just have to manage or not. I have one sunflower and one zinnia in some big pots at the side of the house, and those are the ones I consider our "insurance" if everything out in the main garden gets eaten -- though the squirrels can attack those pots too. I also have lots more unplanted seeds so I can always go another round if these die.

And what else did I do? Well, some routine stuff, like laundry and vacuuming and indoor plant maintenance.


Oh, and I compiled the week's video from the garden wildlife cam. Is it possible to have too much fox footage? If so, we may have it this week. At the beginning, I put out some mediocre leftover meat from a Chinese meal Dave and I ordered. The young fox came two minutes later and eventually, cautiously ate it, and then hung around for another 20 minutes or so, eating and then checking back to make sure nothing was left behind. So there's a lot of footage of him/her hanging around. (Dave has named this fox "Sharpie," because the tip of his tail is black. I think it's the same fox I saw atop the fence a few days back.)
-- In the midst of all that, at 2:54, Sharpie comes right up to the camera and gives it a sniff!
-- At 4:06, a few hours later, Crooked Tail comes and investigates the meat, but it's all gone.
-- At 4:53, we see another fox with a distinctly white-tipped tail. Q-Tip, maybe?
-- At 5:03, a pair of pigeons court each other.
-- At 5:24, the next night, I put down the rest of the Chinese meat. This time, Crooked Tail gets it, then comes back to make sure it's all gone.
-- At 6:15, I moved the camera to the back of the garden and aimed it outward, but all the footage I got was wind. I think I had it aimed too high. Nice wind video, though.
-- At 6:24, some pretty good close-up footage of a fox in the daytime, brushing right past the camera.
-- At 6:34, the fox runs into the garden from the corner of the fence, where it normally jumps in and out. About eight minutes later, it leaves by the same route.

This week I have the camera set up to film that corner, so hopefully we can see more of the animals coming and going.

59 comments:

  1. That bluebell is a " spanish bluebell" (as you probably know, )and will take over the garden in a few years! We now have a huge clump of them in blue and white....nice colour at this time of year.

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    1. On the contrary, I think it's an English one. It has narrow leaves and a drooping flower head with flowers on one side, and yellowish pollen.
      https://www.wildlifetrusts.org/wildlife/how-identify/spanish-or-native-bluebell

      As far as I know, all our bluebells are the English variety, though they can cross-breed with the Spanish ones. I know a house several streets away with lots of Spanish ones in the front garden and they're much bigger and more upright.

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    2. No fight! A friendly debate! :)

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    3. You are of course correct......never seen a pink native bluebell, but it seems they can be! They are starting to " go over" in our dog walking woods, though a splash of rain would help I think.

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  2. I wonder what bird the pigeons disturbed

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    1. According to my Merlin app, that was a parakeet squawking.

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  3. I've had some success against slugs with protecting plants with wool pellets or coffee grounds...

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    1. I have plenty of coffee grounds, so I'll have to try those!

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  4. I do like your ornamental rockwork plant protection idea. I hope all your planted seedling thrive and reward you with many flowers. Are they types that will self seed and spread?

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    1. One of the zinnias was already eaten. :(

      I'm not sure these will self-seed, but some zinnias do.

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  5. I hope the fox enjoyed his Chinese takeaway meal. Not too salty for him?

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  6. "Don't you love my ornamental rockwork?"...May I be brutally honest? The answer is a resounding "No!" and besides you used pieces of broken plant pots - not rocks! Some neighbours have a garden camera like yours and we were delighted to learn that they had recently seen a couple of hedgehogs. I had not seen any in our neighbourhood since January 2010.

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    1. I would love to see hedgehogs but even with holes in our fences -- which we have -- I can't imagine where they'd come from or how they'd get in here. Besides, with a dog coming (eventually), I wouldn't want them to get too comfortable.

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  7. Foxes are so beautiful. I found something charming about the two pigeons casually walking around the garden. Great job squirrel-proofing. We’ll see how the squirrels handle it. The slugs and squirrels would seriously frustrate me.

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    1. They frustrate me too, but it's all just part of gardening!

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  8. I laughed at 'plant prison.' I hope it's successful.
    Lovely fox video. I like the young fox with the black socks, but they're all a joy to watch.


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  9. I think the retirement years are very similar to the school years, when I used to come out and my Mum asked 'What did you do today?' the first answer was always 'nothing', and yet the day had been full of all sorts of things. My garden beds are very similar to yours in that they have lots of broken pots, netting and twiggy sticks scattered on top of them, in our case to keep the cat from thinking that I have prepared him a gloriously fresh cat litter tray.

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    1. Fortunately our wandering cats seem to stick to the back part of the garden where I don't plant anything -- it's our compost/wilderness area. You're right about retirement being a bit like school!

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  10. What did you do today? Nothing. Where did you go? Out. But days can be full of small stuff. I recommend once again the essential peppermint oil as a squirrel deterrent. I couldn't have any flowers without it. They do give me quite a few unwanted baby oaks from the acorns they bury everywhere, though.

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    1. Yeah, I really need to do the peppermint thing. I just haven't gotten around to it and it's easier to complain than take action!

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  11. Have you ever watched the Retirement Plan video from The New Yorker? I think it was actually nominated for an Academy Award? Very touching.

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  12. Will you now be being extra food for the garden wildlife??? Perhaps leave a few takeaway menus for them to peruse?

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    1. I hope not to make a habit of it, but it seems a shame to throw away good protein when I know the critters could use it.

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  13. You will laugh when you see next week's blog post - I took a photo of a planter that Mike put zinnia seeds in & it is FULL of seedlings. We're not even going to cull them - we'll just see what happens. Ha!

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    1. I know! Most people can just throw seeds in the ground and they take off!

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  14. That photo of the "pinkbell" is beautiful. Good job protecting the seedlings from the squirrels. I hope your efforts are successful.

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  15. Although I have protected some of my expensive fruit trees, my strategy has mostly been to plant a lot and hope enough survive.

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    1. Yeah, and I have more seeds. I could easily do another round. We'll see what happens with these.

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  16. Can you let your seedlings stay in the pots until they are a bit bigger and stronger?

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    1. Well, they're in trays with small compartments. I could just plant the seeds directly into the ground, I suppose, but that wouldn't stop the slugs. I have planted a few in large pots so they're a bit more protected, except from the squirrels.

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  17. It seems like you can never find the perfect place to set up a camera. The camera's moved to what you think is a hotspot and then the critters show up in another spot.

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  18. I have so many birds (and squirrels) on my deck that four years ago I gave up planting anything in my tall wooden four foot raised bed kept in one corner. Although still filled with dirt, it now serves as a large bird/squirrel feeding surface. However, every year one single plant (from a petunia last planted four years ago, no less) springs from between the wooden slats--sometimes from the side--or as it did last year, from underneath--and they always produce a profusion of flowers hanging down at least a foot. They last until a hard freeze. Likewise, the sunflower birdseed starts to grow in the bed during the summer, generally, twenty or more, and while they are glorious for a time, the birds eventually eat the center portions and knock the plants down. Nature's regeneration.

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    1. Everything has a life cycle. I'm impressed your petunia keeps coming back! They can be quite persistent little flowers. (And can reseed.)

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  19. Well, that's pretty brilliant. I'm planting my lettuce today (in big pots) and they are a lightning rod for squirrels. I don't think I can do the rocks as that would cover the seeds! But now I'm thinking of some good options!

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    1. My other option is to put a wire screen over the seedlings until they're bigger.

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  20. Those are some tiny seedlings. I'd have waited until they were a little bigg and more sturdy. I have days like that too, busy, because I didn't spend them on the couch but damned if I could say what all I'd done.

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    1. I could wait, I suppose, but would it make much difference? The seed packet says I can plant them straight into the ground, so I don't see why putting small seedlings out would be any different. And larger ones would just get eaten too, wouldn't they? I dunno.

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  21. Our squirrels don't seem to bother seedlings. I wonder why?
    Those are teeny tiny baby zinnias.
    I've been up for two hours and done absolutely nothing except try to get an online account for the place where I take pottery so I can sign up for the next set of classes at noon and, well, here we are. I think I have an account.

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    1. I have never lived in a place where squirrels tear up plants like they do here. I think it's because the ground gets too hard to dig, with our clayey soil, so they resort to digging in the pots. Those zinnias have been in the ground for several weeks! Maybe it's too chilly for them to grow faster.

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  22. I find seeds hard to grow. If my seeds fail, I buy established plants in a flat of 6. These usually thrive. It is always good to have a back-up plan.
    Your video shows that Sharpie the fox has lovely markings. The black on the lower legs and tail is unlike the fox I see here. The fox in my garden is mostly a red hue.

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    1. I usually wouldn't mess with seeds but these came free with a magazine subscription at the library where I used to work, so I just brought them home!

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  23. Fox always looks so dressed up.

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  24. We have Virginia bluebells here in Naperville, IL and they can be blue, pink or white. So lovely to see.
    Here we are told not to feed the wild animals people food. Signs in our parks say it is not good for them.

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    1. I didn't know Virginia bluebells were a thing! Our foxes are already so urbanized that they eat human food regularly -- often scavenged from trash cans. (As we've seen from the videos of them carrying chicken bones, sausages and dog treats through our garden!) I don't think giving them leftovers here and there could do any harm healthwise.

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  25. Does the UK have a Master Gardener program or something comparable? You should do that now that you have more time.
    In case you didn't see, my daughter's camera/feeder is a Netvue Birdfy.

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    1. Thanks for the tip on the camera feeder! I don't know of a master gardener program here but I bet there are similar things. I think my attitude toward gardening may be way too careless for any kind of formal training!

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  26. Yep. You're retired. The whole being busy but not feeling as if anything has been accomplished, is sort of how my retirement seems to be going.

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    1. It's nice, though, isn't it?! There's so much to do, and yet nothing in particular!

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  27. Beautiful pinkbell photo. I've planted a lot of stuff but I don't know if anything will survive with the drought and water restrictions. A dog to come? I can't wait.

    Love,
    Janie

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    1. Can you water by hand, or is all outdoor watering prohibited? Here we sometimes have hosepipe bans, so you can't use a garden hose, but you can water with a can.

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  28. Can there be too much fox footage? No! I enjoyed this with my muesli just now. Thank you!
    Sharpie looks in good health with his coat in good condition.
    When it comes to answer the question "what did you do?", what would be "impressive" in your opinion? I think to plant out seeds, doing the laundry and all the other household things is impressive enough and certainly easily fills up an entire day.

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  29. It's interesting how much time we can spend just doing our daily routines--without the pressure of work! It's a favorite aspect of retirement, the flexibility to do things when I feel like it and take as long as I want.

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