The Wildlife Highway in Your Garden
The Wildlife Highway in Your Garden A Hedgehog Does Not Understand Fence Panels A hedgehog does not know where your garden ends and your neighbour’s begins. It does not pause at the boundary, admire the close-board fencing and say, “Well, that is clearly number 42, so I had better turn round.” We are the ones who put up the barriers. To wildlife, a row of gardens should be one long, useful landscape: somewhere to feed, shelter, nest, hunt, drink and move safely. Yet many modern gardens have become isolated islands. We fence them tightly, pave them neatly, tidy them obsessively and then wonder why the wildlife has disappeared. The good news is that we do not need to turn every garden into a wilderness. We simply need to make small, sensible changes that allow wildlife to move through our spaces rather than being trapped outside them. A garden can be more than a private outdoor room. It can be part of a wildlife highway. The Problem with Isolated Gardens One garden with a pond is h...