We have a new garden ornament this morning. A bin chicken, lol an ibis, slept there last night.
Wow! The BBC tells me they don't just ravage bins, they actually should be highly praised for washing and decimating your invasive 2 billion cane toads (up to 70.000 per female...) - so toad heroes! And pretty!
(They throw the toads around so they eject their toxin, then wash them: "stress, wash and repeat")
Our new garden-inmate is a hedgehog (or 2) - I've seen they're new in NZ, but you don't have them.
S/He makes his way hopefully to my big dead wood heap at dusk. So yesterday I stood and watched patiently and saw the route which went to my right foot/shoe, later left, then scurried past a 3rd time.
For a minute or two I thought it was two, but the light had gone off, couldn't confirm that in the dark.
"Invasive" wild plant (boring, nerdy, weirdo, don't waste your time...): Some neighbour tore out
15 of my big wild flowers (marestail) )between the pavement stones in front of our house, which was putting some green between the stones, my mission. Irked. Found them in neighbour's biowaste and re-planted them, and more besides, and wrote a note explaining that those flowers are good for insects and common, but not invasive. Also made it a mission to get the wrongly used word "invasive" deleted from all German websites. The first just a few hours later totally changed their page on it from "red / invasive", to green and "super insect plant": success! A 2nd I could comment on, a 3rd I wrote to several times (bit slow on the uptake), they're considering changing, and a 4th I could change myself. What a waste of time, but somehow also rewarding in my own small way.
That has now also made me start moving plants around - beautiful but "invasive" ones like apple-of-Peru that I didn't plant and are maybe stopping the 100s I planted that aren't growing, and Chelidonium which is keeping to places nothing else is growing, but is everywhere. And I'm putting them into lots of spaces where nothing else is growing.
And the suneyes were now >150, so I've started cutting them off as decoration for spots in front of the house and in the kitchen table, making sure to do it so the next ones to take their place. They've also superseded everything I'd planted there, beautiful as they are, but it was all very slow in coming up.
This is all new to curb them, up to now I've been letting them do what they want, to see what it is they want. And even now I'm not killing any, I'm just helping them find a place where they can do even more good.... I've taken some
farn fern and chelidonium to put under the cherry where I didn't get the ivy to grow, maybe cos I didn't do it right tho.