When I was growing up in Ealing, it was a rare treat to see a hedgehog. In fact I only saw one once, when I was 12 yrs old, in South Ealing. I tried to pick it up, and that REALLY hurt. I learnt a life lesson: let wildlife be wild. No iPhones back then. Just a vivid memory remainedÂ
Fast forward 30 odd years, it’s even rarer to see a hedgehog in Ealing. Or anywhere. Numbers have declined roughly by 2/3 since my first and only sighting of a live hedgehog. But trail cameras now mean I know they exist, in smaller numbers, but in urban safe havens- I have watched dozens of prickly mummies feeding their baby hoglets, in compost heaps, piles of leaves and back gardens all around our borough. As nocturnal creatures, you are unlikely to spot them coming out to feed, but affordable clever technology means we can capture their movements. And then we can help them to thrive.. or at least survive.
Come along and take part in our second hedgehog habitat creation day 🦔! We will be creating places for hedgehogs to hide during the warmer months and to hibernate in the colder months. This is a joint collaboration with Ealing Park Rangers who will be providing us with the necessary logs and leaves!
The habitat creation will be focusing on Boles Meadow this time. The steps down to Boles Meadow are to the left of St. Mary’s Church as you face it, right next to the entrance of the Bunny park. Please bring gloves.
This is part of our ongoing Hedgehog Highway project which is kindly sponsored by the William Hobbayne Charity.
https://www.facebook.com/events/1119111248768492/
London’s hedgehogs are in trouble, with the city’s population falling by nearly a third since 2000. We need to act fast to reverse this decline, but we can only do this with practical action. We wish to reverse this shocking decline and ensure Ealing’s hedgehogs can thrive by being connected to suitable habitat through the borough. The big issue we plan to address is barriers to movement: more fences and busier roads make it harder for hedgehogs to hunt for food – and find a mate – while also making movement more dangerous.
ZSL (Zoological Society of London) have been surveying hedgehogs across London for 5 years as part of their London Hogwatch project. We have commissioned them (using grants secured by our one lady fundraising team, thank you Sandra!) to help us survey populations in three hog hotspots across Ealing: Pitshanger Park, Brent Lodge Park (aka the Bunny Park) and Elthorne Park and Extension. ZSL will install about 30 cameras in those parks next week (as hedgehogs venture out to eat as much as possible before hibernating) and review all footage for us after a two week period. We will feed back to EWG members via informative online talks during this project- so watch this space.
We’d like to thank our friends at the Charity of William Hobbayne for getting in touch with us proactively to ask if there were upcoming conservation projects they could help support us on in Hanwell, and The Freshwater Foundation for awarding us further funds to get the local community across the whole Borough of Ealing involved in helping hedgehogs and connecting our green spaces and gardens to allow wildlife like hedgehogs to get around the borough and continue to thrive. Â
EWG is also partnering with ZSL to deliver a citizen science project- that’s where you can help.Â
Phase 1
Phase 2
Please help us to change that. Any Hedgehog Heroes please contact me natashagavineo@gmail.com