Produce > Wildlife forum
Bad day in Frogland
Vetivert:
Started making the move to a new plot today, across from my current plot. Larger, long abandoned, covered in tall grass and rotting pallets. The scythe was ready.
Two minutes into the action a frog plops out of the overgrowth - I shoo it away to safety and return to my trance-like state of reaping. Before long, another, and then another. Tiny, small, large - I'm sure I've stumbled upon the matriarch. Is this Frogland? I've been searching for this kingdom since my childhood. Every frog in the allotment must be living on this plot. I tread carefully and bundle all of the snailey pallets into a new palace for my countrymen, already daydreaming of a pond in spring.
A little while later I'm turning clumps of sod. Another frog takes me by surprise as it leaps across the brown earth. But its guts are hanging out. I was horrified; I still am. I should have put it out of its misery but let it hop away. I'm sure it met the end of my scythe; didn't hear it coming. Maybe strimmers are better for the tall wilderness.
hippydave:
Strimmers will not discriminate between grass or from either, ask me how I know.
Paulh:
The only slow worm I have seen is the one that I ran my mower over 40 years aoo.
galina:
It is horrible when this happens. I still remember being sick when I speared a mouse digging parsnips years ago. And OH also got a frog with the strimmer. Unfortunately it happens. Sad though. :tearyeyed:
pumkinlover:
The manure heap used to be the worse for this. Now I don't have one I haven't had this problem.
Like others I feel dreadful when I have hurt any amphibians by accident.
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