So we had half an inch of snow down here in Sussex and the roads became impassable, so a day working from home meant a chance at lunchtime to go and see how the garden was faring.

My Crocus tommasinianus, which are planted in part for early spring colour and in part because they are fairly well liked by some early pollinators, were certainly not open for business, although they did look rather fetching against the dazzling white. They're really easy to grow, cheap to buy, and naturalise and spread well, so I'd certainly recommend them, but plant them where they will get sun and hence open up wide to invite insects.

In the woodland garden,the 'Wild' Daffodils were looking very chilly indeed. Daffodils don't rank highly when it comes to wildlife, usually hosting just some pollen beetles, but even these were nowhere to be seen yet.

But the thing I really wanted to check on was the pond, where the Frogs laid their first spawn last Saturday night, again doing so synchronously with those in a friend's pond half a mile away. Last weekend it was like a jacuzzi in there as male Frogs thrashed about at any sniff of a female like water polo layers sprinting after the ball.

Well, winter's lid had firmly closed over the top of the spawn, which is always laid in the warm shallows at the right hand end of the pond. But I'm not worried - Frogs in Britain have had to cope with frosts since the year dot, and although I might lose some of the spawn, I'm confident that plenty of it will be fine. 

If you want to drop by my RSPB wildlife gardening blog, it is updated every Friday, and I'd love to see you there - www.rspb.org.uk/community/blogs/hfw

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