tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2153913301497672504.post7429016626724857479..comments2024-02-25T08:48:49.103+00:00Comments on A Gardener's Weather Diary: Cold and Wet First Week of OctoberSue Garretthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08164518448098182276noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2153913301497672504.post-20851748236219681842019-10-13T10:07:10.693+01:002019-10-13T10:07:10.693+01:00The nearest we've got to a honeyberry is looki...The nearest we've got to a honeyberry is looking it up. Sadly not a single berry in 6 years. Not sure how many squirrels have eaten our cobnuts, I suspect more than one but I've never seen more than one in the tree at a time. Nothing at all we can do to stop them though.Martynhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05245774393957298668noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2153913301497672504.post-38778685415352879452019-10-11T20:40:36.089+01:002019-10-11T20:40:36.089+01:00Had to look up honeyberry, ah, fruit of a honeysuc...Had to look up honeyberry, ah, fruit of a honeysuckle, makes sense; not mine, though, which is black and a japonica. Birds'll sometimes eat them. Poop is staining and black. Squirrels or rather one squirrel consumed every single nut on my almond tree, so gave up on it after a couple of years. Before the squirrel found it, it had the most beautiful white blossoms in springtime.Jane Stronghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05016381279699618539noreply@blogger.com