Buzz & Scuttle
Insect appreciation project by collage artist Marian Hill. I started by illustrating the insects inhabiting our messy urban garden… now invertebrate obsessed. Go to buzzandscuttle.com for free insect resources & more project information.
- There are still some places on my adults insect collage workshop at Trebah Garden,Helford estuary,Cornwall on Monday 14th July. Why not join me for a morning collaging insects in this truly beautiful place! Tickets are available through Trebah Garden website: www.trebahgarden.co.uk/event/insect...
- If you live in the Bristol area, why not visit the wonderful Festival of Nature this weekend in Millennium Square area, Bristol. There will be masses to see and I will be running a collage workshop in We The Curious. Tickets are available through the event website: www.bnhc.org.uk/festival-of-...
- It’s been a delight to design a Bath Wildlife Safari booklet with Bathscape to help local residents identify species they may spot around the city. It’s amazing how many insects thrive in urban habitats! www.bathscape.co.uk
- Glamourous Rose Chafer beetles are welcome residents in our garden 😀🪲❤️
- The Stinging Nettle may not be an eye-catching plant, but it’s a home & vital source of food for many insects. If you nurture a nettle patch, these are just a small sample of species which will love living in your garden. #wildgarden #urbanwildlife
- Resist the urge to mow your lawn this spring! Surely wildflowers, long, lush green grasses and lots of insects are far more pleasing than short, green turf? #nomowmay #nomowanytime
- I ran a Buzz & Scuttle insect collage workshop at #GrowWilder In Bristol yesterday. Awesome venue, lovely people and stunning workshop outcomes! What a perfect way to spend the day!
- Do you live in Bristol? Why not come along to Grow Wilder, 181 Frenchay Rd BS16 1EL on Sat 3rd May 1-3.45pm and join our Family insect collage workshop. Booking link on Grow Wilder facebook page : www.facebook.com/AWTGrowWilde...
- Delighted to see a number of different butterfly species fluttering around our tiny city garden today. #urbanwildlife #butterfly #naturegarden #insectgarden
- Dandelions help to fertilise top-soil. Their deep roots bring nutrients to the surface, which helps shallow-rooted plants to thrive. The nectar and pollen of these cheerful native wildflowers are vital food for many early Spring insects. Please don’t weed out these useful flowers!
- Don’t rush out & mow you lawn… instead enjoy your beautiful long grass filled with wildflowers … and wildlife will thank you for leaving an important habitat undisturbed!
- If you live in the Bristol area, why not join me for an adult insect collage workshop at Grow Wilder Bristol on Saturday morning 3rd May. Booking link : www.facebook.com/events/13575...
- Reposted by Buzz & ScuttleI heard someone talking on the radio this morning about leaving #dog hair out for #birds to use in their nests *If pets have been treated with certain flea treatments, this could kill the chicks* Now seems a good time to repost this article 👇 #neonicotinods www.theguardian.com/environment/...
- If you live in the Swindon area, why not visit the wonderful @festivaloftomorrow.bsky.social . Buzz & Scuttle will be running a FREE invertebrate collage workshop on Tues 18th Feb at STEAM Swindon. Do come & join the fun. So much to do and see including the awe inspiring Gaia model Earth!
- Reposted by Buzz & ScuttlePlease say no to pesticides and herbicides. Cocktails of these chemicals in fields, gardens, parks, verges, community spaces are poisoning wildlife including bees, birds, hedgehogs, butterflies, beetles, frogs, damselflies, and polluting our rivers. Let's give nature a chance 🐝
- If you love hedgehogs & would like to see them in your garden, make sure you provide plentiful food for them by nurturing & not eradicating the creatures they love to eat. I always thought hedgehogs eat slugs but have been sent link to research finding hedgehogs only eat slugs when desperate.
- Invertebrates may mostly disappear from view during winter but they are still in our gardens hiding from the cold in dead wood, leaf litter, dark nooks & crannies or deep in the soil. Help wildlife thrive by avoiding unnecessary digging, clearing & leaf blowing during winter months.
- I had great fun collaging the extraordinary Cramp-ball Fungus Weevil (Platyrhinus resinosus). This well camouflaged weevil looks remarkably like a bit of rotting wood, so is tricky to spot in nooks & crannies of ash wood where cramp-ball fungus is growing.
- Reposted by Buzz & ScuttleIt’s funny that we call it “dead” wood, when it can support so much life! 🪵🪲🐜🍄 Here’s a video I made earlier in the year, to spread some love for this vital habitat. #Invertebrates #Fungi #Deadwood #Ecology 🧪