Homes for hedgehogs - Hedgehog housing

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Homes for Hedgehogs

Hedgehog housing

Hedgehogs are experts at seeking out cosy nooks and crannies to make a nest in. During the winter, hedgehogs will look for a secure home with a constant temperature. In summer, they’ll look for small tucked away sites where they’ll stay for one to two days before moving on. You can help them spot the ideal home by having natural features in your garden such as compost heaps or log piles, which have the added benefit of supporting a wide range of wildlife. Leaving a wilder area in your garden is always useful to many species, and hedgehogs may well move in to either hibernate or raise young. 

 

WildNet - Gillian Day

If you can’t add any of those features, or would like to provide an alternative, you can make or buy your own hedgehog house. Hedgehog houses can be made out of almost anything, but there are a few things you should think about if making your own. 

  • Make sure the entry is big enough – it needs to be 13cm x 13cm.
  • You can use a plain box, but ideally you need a tunnel to stop predators reaching into the house. You can use a pipe to make a simple tunnel, or if this isn’t possible, create an interior wall that the hedgehog can hide behind.
  • Line the nest with dry bedding like dry leaves or straw bedding for pets.
  • Covering the box with plastic sheeting and then covering it with leaves soil and grass cuttings will help disguise it.
  • Don’t use treated wood and leave any wood unpainted, as the smell will be too strong for hedgehogs. Wood treatment can also contain chemicals that are harmful to many forms of wildlife.
  • When placing your hedgehog house, choose a quiet area with lots of shade.

Your hedgehog information pack contains information on how to make your own hedgehog home. If you would like to buy one there are hundreds available online, just make sure that it is made of non-treated material and has a tunnel or internal wall. 

Once your Hedgehog house is in place remember to clear it out once a year in March or April – as long as it’s empty - so that it’s fresh for the next hedgehog family that might want to move in.

Hedgehog facing the camera

Thank you for being a hedgehog hero

This is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to actions you can take to protect Somerset’s hedgehogs. See below for some more ideas, and look out for emails from us over the next three months as we share lots of tips, ideas and fun facts about hedgehogs and how you can help the hogs in your garden. 

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