Help wildlife in the hot weather
Help wildlife in hot weather and lend a helping hand. Keep your watering stations topped up with water, and let some of your garden grow wild to provide shade for animals.
Water vole by Terry Whittaker/2020VISION
Help wildlife in hot weather and lend a helping hand. Keep your watering stations topped up with water, and let some of your garden grow wild to provide shade for animals.
All animals need water to survive. By providing a water source in your garden, you can invite in a whole menagerie!
Hedges provide important shelter and protection for wildlife, particularly nesting birds and hibernating insects.
The common prawn is a familiar sight to anyone who has spent time exploring rockpools - particularly their characteristic quick dart into the darkness just as you spot them!
Once a rare visitor to the UK, this striking gull is now found nesting here in large colonies.
How to dance like wildlife
Turn your garden into a wildlife hotspot!
Dara shares his different way of looking at the world and a different way of ‘being’.
The herring gull is the typical 'seagull' of our seaside resorts, though our coastal populations have declined in recent decades.
Whether feeding the birds, or sowing a wildflower patch, setting up wildlife areas in your school makes for happier, healthier and more creative children.
The fluffy, white heads of common cotton-grass dot our brown, boggy moors and heaths as if a giant bag of cotton wool balls has been thrown across the landscape!