Hedgehogs may be hibernating now, but we all like to see them scuttling across the garden when the temperature warms up. However, numbers of hedgehogs have fallen by 30 per cent in ten years, so there is a real worry about their survival as a species. HEATHER BARRON looks at six ways in which you can help the hedgehogs in your garden, and even encourage them in.

1. Get together with your neighbour and create an opening in your shared fence to allow the hedgehog to roam further in search of food, nesting places or a mate.

2. Don’t light the bonfire before checking for ‘hogs, and take care when cutting or strimming the grass.

3. Leave out some cat food for the ‘hogs, and to prevent cats and foxes helping themselves, place it in a plastic storage container with the lid weighed down with bricks.

4. Hedgehogs love slugs and other garden pests, so avoid using slug pellets and let nature’s natural pest control clean up your garden

5. Don’t clear away all the fallen leaves in autumn as the hedgehog will use some for nesting material. Log piles are great places for them to nest and hibernate, and you can create your own in a quiet corner of the garden.

6. If you have a pond in your garden, make sure the ‘hog can climb out if it falls in. Although great swimmers, they still need a helpful ramp or a shallow area to get out.

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Amazing Facts About the European Hedgehog

• The hedgehog got its name because of its peculiar foraging habits. They root through hedges and other undergrowth in search of their favourite food – small creatures such as insects, worms, centipedes, snails, mice, frogs, and snakes. As it moves through the hedges it emits pig-like grunts — thus, the name hedgehog.

• The hedgehog is nocturnal, coming out at night and spending the day sleeping in a nest under bushes or thick shrubs.

• Their coats are thick and spiny, providing them with a formidable defence against predators such as the fox. When they feel alarmed or intimidated, they will curl up into a spiny ball to protect its vulnerable stomach.

• They have about 5000 spines. Each spine lasts about a year then drops out and a replacement grows.

• The spines are hollow and springy with a flexible neck and they are erected by muscles. At the base, there is a smooth ball which bends on impact.

• There may be up to 500 fleas on one hedgehog but the specific hedgehog flea (known as Archaepsylla erinacei) rarely bites humans.

• They also have a habit when stimulated by a strong smell or taste to self-anoint – this means they cover their prickles in foamy saliva. No-one is certain why it does this.

• While hunting for food, they rely primarily upon their senses of hearing and smell because their eyesight is weak though their eyes are adapted for night-time vision.

• They have a particularly long, extending snout beyond the front of their mouth which they use to help them forage for food.

• The diet of a hedgehog has claimed it the reputation as being the ‘gardener’s friend’ as it includes so many ‘pests’. Frequently food put out for dogs and cats in town and city gardens also provides a meal for them and it is certainly a good way to encourage one into your own garden.

• Hedgehogs are usually solitary, usually pairing up only to mate. When they mate they often make loud, snuffling, noises. The male circles the female, sometimes for hours, to persuade her to mate. They will separate thereafter and the male takes no part in rearing the family.

• The young are born in litters ranging from one to eleven. They remain with their mothers for only four to seven weeks before heading out on their own. Among the predators, females must guard against during this period are other male hedgehogs, which will sometimes prey upon the young of their species. Hedgehog mothers have also been known to eat their young if the nest is disturbed, though they sometimes simply move them to a new nest.

• Baby hedgehogs are born blind after 32 days and their spines are soft. However, a late litter born in September seldom survive their first winter. The young are suckled by their mother until they are able to hunt for themselves. After about four weeks, the mother will take the young out on their first foraging trip and after ten days, the family will separate.

• There are 15 species of hedgehog.

• Hedgehogs in cold climes hibernate over the winter. In warmer climates, such as deserts, they sleep through heat and drought in a similar process called aestivation. In more temperate areas they remain active all year.

• European hedgehogs hibernate throughout winter. They feed as much as possible during the autumn and in around October build its nests of leaves and grass in which to hibernate.

Thanks to OneKind, a charity that aims to educate and inspire the world about animal kind, and in doing so to encourage everyone to live a more animal-friendly lifestyle, for the following facts. To find out more about the charity, visit https://onekind.org/