Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Give them a start

-

EDGEHOGS have to be our most adorable native mammal – and they are also a gardener’s best friend, gobbling up pesky slugs, snails and caterpilla­rs.

So at this time of year, good gardeners should pay special attention to these amazing little animals.

I work closely with the British Hedgehog Preservati­on Society as an ambassador for the great work they do to protect them. But we can all do our bit in our gardens to make life easier for these hibernatin­g heroes.

Sadly, recent findings suggest the number of hedgehogs in the UK has fallen by more than half since 2000.

It’s believed to be due to the urbanisati­on of gardens, which reduces hedgerows and important habitats, as well as their insect prey.

But gardeners are staging a fightback and that decline has slowed in recent years. And there’s lots you can do to help convert your outdoor space into a place hedgehogs love.

Crucially, you need to make your garden accessible. As you may have gathered from their rather telling name, hedges are their perfect haunt. That is because they provide a cover, a habitat for bugs and allow them to hop from garden to garden.

If your garden has a fenced boundary, don’t fret – you can easily help hedgehogs out by adding a highway. This is a CD-sized cut out for them to use as a doorway.

As hedgehogs have such poor eyesight and rely on their hearing, it stops them from getting muddled and wandering into the road.

Label their new entrance with a proudly placed “hedgehog highway” sign and you might find your neighbours join in the effort to make their garden into a haven.

Find more informatio­n from the BHPS campaign, Hedgehog Street, which gives tips for keeping your green spaces suitable for these marvellous mammals.

Once you have created a way for them to get in, you will want these prickly pals to keep coming back.

You can easily build your own hedgehog house in an afternoon. For videos or blogs on how to do this, visit my website, daviddomon­ey.com.

Essentiall­y, the idea is to use an old wooden crate with an entrance tunnel 15cm wide and 11cm high to ensure predators can’t get in.

Leaving areas to grow wild or building a log pile is also effective.

But do not be tempted to take a hedgehog from the wild and bring it home as it may have dependent young in a nest that will starve to death without it.

A single hedgehog can travel for more than a mile in a night to find food, so why not open your very own hedgehog cafe?

They will certainly put in the legwork to find it.

Hedgehogs are lactose intolerant, so although they will eat dairy products it causes them tummy discomfort.

Chicken or turkey-based cat food is ideal, and you should buy the ones in jelly instead of gravy so that it is not too salty and dehydratin­g.

Hedgehogs will feast and fatten themselves up before going into hibernatio­n in November, so this is when they are really searching for food.

Make sure the supply is reaching them instead of the neighbourh­ood cats. Hedgehog feeding stations are sized specifical­ly to let hedgehogs access food and also keep it covered and out of the rain.

Don’t forget to provide an ample water supply. Water sources can be hard found, especially in winter, so I always put out a shallow water bowl that’s an inch or two deep and keep it topped up and refreshed daily.

At this time of year, it’s vital to keep checking for hedgehogs in piles of

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom