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How To Make Your Garden A Haven For Bees & Bugs - with Professor Dave Goulson.

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  • Опубликовано: 24 мар 2021
  • In this video Professor Dave Goulson of the University of Sussex discusses ways to make your garden more bee and bug friendly; he looks at plants, plant care, weeding and mowing as well as ways to create bug friendly habitats in your garden.
    He also looks at the impact of modern life on the insect population over the last 40+ years, some initiatives designed to reverse the shocking decline as well as what could happen to the world should insects continue to be eradicated.
    Professor Goulson is a specialist in bumblebee ecology, founder of The Bumblebee Conservation Trust and The Buzz Club. He has also written five fantastic books including 'The Garden Jungle', 'A Buzz in the Meadow' and the new ‘Gardening for Bumblebees'.
    This talk is part of the IV 2021 team challenge to improve our outdoor spaces for wildlife. You can find out more about what we do in the Environment section of our website www.innovationvisual.com/why-...
    #Gardeningforinsects #Bees #bumblebees #ProfessorDaveGoulson #TheBuzzClub #TheBumbleBeeConservationTrust

Комментарии • 36

  • @susietaylor2468
    @susietaylor2468 3 года назад +10

    We need to listen to the scientists like Prof Goulson. We need our pollinators and insects !

  • @lindalaw9616
    @lindalaw9616 3 года назад +10

    Excellent video, thank you for your mom giving you Dave’s book to read and thank you for getting in touch with Dave and your team for arranging and publishing this for everyone to watch. Very well done.

  • @simondemeulenaer9653
    @simondemeulenaer9653 2 года назад +2

    Everyone should see this! Thank you so much for this video

  • @mmarting27
    @mmarting27 2 года назад +2

    These are the type of videos, and the type of information we should be spreading all around our social media. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and for yor labor. From my side, I´ll make sure I share this as much as I can. Each grain of sand makes possible to make a dune. THANKS.

  • @elsathal7359
    @elsathal7359 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing 🐞💞🐌🐝🪲🐚🐜🐛🪱🥰

  • @prinzearki796
    @prinzearki796 2 года назад +2

    here watching friend

  • @thelavishlepidote8539
    @thelavishlepidote8539 3 года назад

    I want to get a Doctorate's degree in Entomology because I love insects so I ordered a great textbook about insects. I'm going to create my own garden as you explained for bees and other bugs!

  • @micksmixxx
    @micksmixxx 2 года назад +2

    Fantastic information, sir. Although I feel that I've been 'doing my bit' to aid pollinators into my garden for years now I'm right now in the process of downloading more text files to add to my arsenal. It's a real pity that many sites simply want you to purchase from them, rather than giving information freely. (Some of us, financially, aren't in a position to fill their pockets.) 😉

  • @judithhall6683
    @judithhall6683 2 года назад

    When we lived on our boat on a river we used to have regular leaf eater beas making a home in the gunnels. Lovely to watch.

  • @fruitsandflowersnorway620
    @fruitsandflowersnorway620 2 года назад

    Fantastic listening to this guys knowladge on gardening , very pleasing .

  • @VictorFursov
    @VictorFursov 2 года назад

    Thank you for interesting and funny video. Best wishes and good luck! If you have some insects pests, you can show it to me too.

  • @kiddcapri1711
    @kiddcapri1711 2 года назад +1

    Shame more haven't seen this... I like to think I did my bit last few years since I first got wind of insect decline, a third of my garden is wildflower's now in the 18 years I lived here this year I've never seen so many insect's in my garden.

  • @paula5440
    @paula5440 2 года назад +3

    After watching this I’ve started drilling holes into old dead wood stumps etc, my question is I stopped mowing my garden (2 acres) and creeping buttercups have just taken over, are creeping buttercups good for wildlife? Should I be digging as many as I can out? I’m trying to make a wildflower meadow but seeds I’ve bought are just unsuccessful and I think it’s because of the creeping buttercups (looks beautiful though but I don’t just want a sea of yellow choking everything) thanks 👍🏻

    • @ferret5772
      @ferret5772 2 года назад +2

      Cut the area back now as close to the ground as possible removing all the clippings , then in summer go out in your locality and find the wildflowers growing therein then collect some of the seed and scatter it over the area you want covered , repeat this over the next few years and nature will do its bit , try to reduce the fertility in the soil by removing the clippings use them as compost for your garden.👍😀

    • @davidedge2189
      @davidedge2189 2 года назад +2

      Use a spade to invert the lawn down to at least 6 inches .Do an area you feel comfortable with.Do it in April,then rake once a week until May to remove weeds You can water to get weed germination .Weeds will only germinate in the top 5 mm,so no need to rake below this .Then put your seeds on the top of the soil in early may,and gently tread in .PS hope you don’t mind me trying to help ,I’m a farmer .

  • @stuartcarmichael750
    @stuartcarmichael750 2 года назад

    My only experience with Earwigs is having them decimate my turnip plantings... Never knew they ate pests...

  • @peterfowler7189
    @peterfowler7189 2 года назад

    I’m new to beetles and insects and would like to know more about

    • @TimButler0
      @TimButler0 2 года назад

      You should buy any of Dave Goulson's books as they are a great place to start to learn more.

  • @naturenurturejm3517
    @naturenurturejm3517 2 года назад

    Am so sorry i cannot loved some insects, dont get me wrongly my greatest fears are afraid of lizards the common lizards in tropical country’s everyday i am encountered with them so i tried not to go where they are in my gardens i think they they are ugly omg so tell me how can i over come my fears??

  • @gardenofpraise567
    @gardenofpraise567 2 года назад +1

    Just a few days earlier, when I realized that my husband had spay and killed all the wild violet and Irish moss under my beautiful Japanese Stewartia tree, I literally screamed at him👹

  • @carolasselin3794
    @carolasselin3794 Год назад

    dragonfly

  • @korky73
    @korky73 Год назад

    what happen when incest larvae becomes a food source /??? ....

  • @alexapetersposner2429
    @alexapetersposner2429 2 года назад

    Test

    • @TimButler0
      @TimButler0 2 года назад

      What are you testing? :-)

  • @rosefc8394
    @rosefc8394 2 года назад +1

    Hello, BaทbaibบN Nบiz Thai1and
    Thank you for sharing VDO

  • @rorkgoose6114
    @rorkgoose6114 Год назад

    To correct Mr. Goulson, Organic does NOT mean the absence of pesticides, it means the pesticides the farmer/gardener could use were on the approved list. This false conscription that organics doesn't use pesticides comes from ignorance and lazy thinking.
    Organics does not mean better.
    Organics does not mean safe.
    Organics means only 2 things: 1) the fertilizers and pesticides allowed are on the approved list, and 2) the products sold from an organic operation are overpriced.

    • @innovationvisual333
      @innovationvisual333  Год назад

      Information from the Soil Association (who certify Organic standards in the UK) website - "Under the Soil Association’s organic standards, all weedkillers are banned, and farmers are only able to use a very limited number of naturally-derived pesticides as a last resort (like citronella and clove oil), but only under very restricted circumstances.
      Organic farming avoids the use of synthetic fertilisers, as the principles of organic farming are based on nourishing plants naturally, by building fertile soils. Farmers do this using clover and legumes to 'fix' nitrogen, as well as using compost, animal manure and green manures (like the white clover below), and crop rotations to maintain healthy, nutrient-rich soils. "

  • @Peleski
    @Peleski Год назад

    I don't agree with encouraging people to create stagnant water pools, even if they benefit hover flies, inflicting mosquitos on your neighbours is hardly responsible.

    • @donaldlyons17
      @donaldlyons17 Месяц назад

      he might mean very small sources of water like a bottle cap

    • @Peleski
      @Peleski Месяц назад

      @@donaldlyons17 mosquitoes can breed in a bit of water on a dead leaf