Finding a place to call home is important to everyone - somewhere to feel safe, secure and to escape the stresses of modern life. Desirable for us, but vital for our wildlife.
An estate agent’s advert for a “well-presented family home (FREEHOLD) within a short walking distance of good local amenities” would be as attractive to humans looking to start a new family, as to hedgehogs, toads or robins - although perhaps “flying distance” would be more appropriate for garden birds!
There’s no place like home. Perhaps some dense scrub for nesting birds such as wrens, or a log pile for beetles and centipedes, or the soft, warm soil beneath a compost bin for a bumblebee nest, or (if you are very lucky) your roof space might be used as a bat maternity roost.
Places to ‘raise’ the next generation are obviously important, but wildlife needs shelter at other times too: safe roosting spots for migrating birds, marginal planting around ponds to help froglets safely disperse, seed heads for hibernating ladybirds, long grass for grass snakes to hunt, or hedges and shrubs for our beloved hedgehogs to forage and avoid danger.