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Labyrinth


Dean Lofthouse
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I do the same with customers Felix, I'm always persuading them to let us leave a little log pile somewhere as habitat in an obscure part of the garden.

There's many jobs I've been on where the previous less scrupulous tree services people have "habitat piles of brash" without asking the customer :lol:

 

Dean,

 

have you got any habitat areas in your yard (& i don't mean the piles of knotty stuf you can't be arsed to process :biggrin:)

 

I remember listening to a guy at one of the ATF seminars a couple of years back who was into researching Stag beetle movements.

 

He said that he had found that tree surgeons yards were ideal hotspots due to the potential habitat in them.

 

part buried poles being the most suitable replica of specific habitat :thumbup1:

 

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I've just thinned the woodland part of my yard And cleaned it all up David, next step is to create habit and plant some more unusual trees

Stuck some Juglans Nigra in last year could do with some suggestions for some specimen trees that will do well in the northern climate and in clay soil.

I have an ancient oak stem from the old woodland that I have placed in there as habitat, it was a lot bigger but Pete McTree cut it in half that time you came up when he got his truck stick against it :lol:

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I have an ancient oak stem from the old woodland that I have placed in there as habitat, it was a lot bigger but Pete McTree cut it in half that time you came up when he got his truck stick against it :lol:

 

Phillistine :001_rolleyes::biggrin:

 

 

 

Will be great for things like wood boring wasps & cardinal beetles etc.....:thumbup1:

 

 

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Dean,

 

have you got any habitat areas in your yard (& i don't mean the piles of knotty stuf you can't be arsed to process

 

.

 

The Oak stem I mentioned that McTree butchered, there looks to be signs of activity.

 

My Yew hedge progressing in the background

 

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