Hedgehogs are a gardener’s friend, as they eat beetles, caterpillars, worms and other invertebrates. Did you know as many as 10 different hedgehogs may visit a garden over several nights? This could mean ‘your hedgehog’ is actually a number of different ones visiting at different times! Here’s what you can do to help encourage hedgehogs into your garden and keep them happy throughout the year.
Leave areas of the garden wild, with piles of leaves, logs or compost. These make an attractive nest, as well as a home for the invertebrates that hedgehogs like to eat. Making an artificial home can be as simple as placing a piece of board against a wall. You can buy a purpose-built hedgehog house or build your own.
Hedgehogs can travel around a mile every night, so they may need help to get into and out of your garden. Try cutting holes in fences, removing bricks from walls, or digging tunnels under the garden boundary. Hedgehogs can travel through gaps as small as 13x13cm, so these gaps don't need to be large. Replacing garden fencing for native hedgerows provides access through your garden for hedgehogs. Hedgerows also provide shelter for other wildlife too. Remember to check with your neighbour before making a highway.
You can encourage hedgehogs into your garden by providing food and fresh water. Tips for leaving out food and water:
If the hedgehog is hibernating, gently put it back into its nest, re-cover it with the nest material and leave it alone. If this isn't possible - for example, because the nesting site has already been destroyed - then place the hedgehog in a part of the garden where it will be safe and sheltered, with as much of the original nest as possible. If there's not much natural shelter available, you could use a large box instead, but make sure the hedgehog will be able to get out of the box easily when it next wakes up. If the hedgehog isn't hibernating and has young hoglets, re-cover them with the nesting material and leave them alone. If this isn't possible, please contact us for more advice. Find out what to do if you've found an injured or sick hedgehog or an orphaned hoglet in your garden. Replacing garden fencing for native hedgerows provides access through your garden for hedgehogs. Hedgerows also provide shelter for other wildlife too. Remember to check with your neighbour before making a highway.
Cats aren't normally a problem, as they'll usually leave hedgehogs alone after an initial investigation. Dogs can attack hedgehogs, so try to keep them away from hedgehogs and monitor or keep your dog on a lead in the garden at dusk or night, when you know the hedgehogs will be out. You can also 'warn' any hedgehog before you come outside by turning a light on first. Hedgehogs do carry fleas. However, pet owners don't need to worry as these fleas can only survive on hedgehogs and not on other species.