Hedgehog Awareness Week
an encouragement to help hedgehogs even more than you normally do!!
Welcome to the Substack edition of this update … which appeared here just a few minutes ago!
I know that this is NOT a photograph of a hedgehog … but I am so thrilled to be hand feeding this beautiful robin in my garden … here is a video I made a few years ago explaining how you too can have these magical moments!
Ok - so now onto the main news …
Just one week to go until Hedgehog Awareness Week … have you got anything lined up?
This year the British Hedgehog Preservation Society is asking people to ‘Welcome Wildlife!’ by creating a space for wildlife in your own gardens or green spaces and encouraging landowners such as schools and councils to do the same.
There are also lots of lovely wildlife-friendly features that can be added (and hazards that can be avoided) to make an area more welcoming to hedgehogs:
Hedgehog highways allow vital access to more habitat; these 13cm x 13cm square gaps in the bottom of boundary walls and fences ensure hedgehogs can get in and out easily – and once these Hedgehog Highways are made you can log them at www.bighedgehogmap.org.
Log piles, leaf piles, wild corners and edges will attract natural food and offer shelter for hedgehogs.
Water is vital for all wildlife and can be scarce, especially during hot spells. Make sure there are always several clean shallow bowls of water in the garden for hedgehogs – pop a few pebbles in so that bees and butterflies can safely take a drink too.
Ponds or pools are great for wildlife but do ensure there are escape routes – a sloping edge, ramp or half-submerged rock for hedgehogs to scramble out on.
Stop using poisons and pesticides that could directly harm wildlife and destroy the food chain.
Litter is a problem for wildlife and while this is (hopefully) not an issue in your own garden, it very likely is in the wider environment. Contact local landowners where litter is an issue to see if they can help; remember to point out the danger to wildlife.
Netting can become entangled in hedgehog spines: make sure sports nets are put away and garden netting is raised 30cm off the ground so hedgehogs can safely pass under. Always carefully check for wildlife before mowing, strimming or lighting a bonfire pile.
Lovely Fay Vass, Chief Executive for BHPS, said: “These small actions to ‘Welcome Wildlife’ during HedgehogWeek can help create and link fantastic habitats for hedgehogs; just a little effort from each of us could make life a lot easier for them! If you don’t have a garden yourself, you can still help by contacting public space managers, neighbours, family and friends to ensure they are all doing their bit.”
BHPS is urging everyone to become a Hedgehog Champion for their area at Hedgehog Street – a project run by BHPS and People’s Trust for Endangered Species. Sign up for free to join over 126,000 Champions at www.hedgehogstreet.org
So I hope that some of you can join in - undertake some of the actions suggested … let us know what you get up to in the comments, or pop over to the Hedgehog Highways Facebook Group to join in the conversation.
Finally - please cast good thoughts in the general direction of my boy, Pip - today is the first day of his A level exams … he is a good kid.



