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  • Help a hedgehog

Help a hedgehog

What should you do if you find a sick or injured hedgehog?

© Hedgehogs © John Hawkins/Surrey Hills Photography
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Should I try to help a sick or injured hedgehog?

Hedgehogs usually hibernate between November through to mid-March, but they can sometimes be seen out and about during this period changing nesting sites. It is unusual to see a hedgehog staggering around during winter or in daylight, so if you do see one and it looks unwell, it might need a helping hand.

Handling and care

Hedgehogs are wild animals, so being handled is a stressful experience. If you are unsure, please contact a specialist group before trying to help. If you decide to intervene, here’s what to do:

  • Prepare a cardboard box with high sides by lining it with a towel or scrunched up newspaper (so that the hedgehog can hide).
  • Find yourself a pair of gardening gloves before gently scooping up the hedgehog into the box.
  • Keep the box in a quiet, warm place: a hot water bottle filled with hot tap water wrapped in a towel can provide a gentle heat source – make sure it doesn’t go cold!
  • You can provide some fresh water and meaty cat or dog food, but don’t try to feed the hedgehog directly.

 

 

 

What to do next

If you haven’t already, contact The British Hedgehog Preservation Society, who can offer in depth advice and help you find a local rescue centre. The Wildlife Trusts do not offer a general service for care and rehabilitation of sick or injured animals, although some individual Trusts may offer local services. For more information on hedgehogs and how you can help them, visit our pages on the subject.

 

How can you help hedgehogs?

Hedgehogs are found throughout the UK, save a few Scottish islands. Gardens, hedgerows, woodlands, grasslands, parks, and cemeteries are all important hedgehog habitats, and adult hedgehogs travel between 1-2km per night over home ranges between 10-20 hectares in size searching for food and mates – that’s entire housing estates and neighbourhoods!

Make your garden a hedgehog haven

Everyone’s contribution is important. Combined, our gardens provide a space for wildlife larger than all our National Nature Reserves, so by gardening in a wildlife-friendly way, we can help our spiky companions move around safely and find a home.

Download our free ‘Get creative for hedgehogs’ booklet here for more information and inspiration of what you can do to help hedgehogs!

We’re also encouraging people to link their gardens to allow hedgehogs free movement across the city to find food and mates. Here are some guides on how to create a hedgehog hole and how to create a hedgehog house.

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    • Help a hedgehog
    • How to attract bumblebees to your garden
    • How to attract butterflies to your garden
    • How to build a bat box
    • How to build a mini-pond
    • How to build a pond
    • How to build a pond
    • How to compost your waste
    • How to create a container garden for wildlife
    • How to create a hedgehog hole
    • How to encourage newts or other amphibians to your garden
    • How to feed birds in your garden
    • How to grow a wildlife-friendly garden
    • How to make a bee hotel
    • How to make a hedgehog house
    • How to make a log shelter
    • How to make a new build garden for wildlife
    • How to start a wildlife garden from scratch
    • How to grow a wild patch
    • Peat-free compost stockists near you

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Call us: 0114 263 4335

Find us: Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust, 37 Stafford Road, Sheffield S2 2SF

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