• What’s the Buzz About? Planting for Pollinators

    Nature on your doorstep volunteer Emma Harpham, discovers what the buzz is all about I have a love of bugs but especially bees, bumble and solitary I find them all fascinating. To me they are fuzzy, buzzing wonders of nature. Do you know that bumble...
    • 12 Apr 2023
  • Join the community gardening revolution

    Can growing our own food have well-being benefits, help to reduce food poverty, make us healthier, and benefit wildlife? Nature on your doorstep volunteer Martyn Davies, investigates the benefits of growing your own vegetables From my perspective the...
    • 6 Mar 2023
  • National Nestbox Week is fast approaching

    RSPB's Asma Faraz celebrates National Nestbox Week this month by encouraging everyone to put up a home for your feathered friends just in time for breeding season.    Blue tit peeking out of a nestbox credit: Ben Andrews Valentine’s d...
    • 8 Feb 2023
  • Why everyone should look out of their window for an hour from time to time

    A recollection of my first Big Garden bird watch in 2022 and why I will take part every year from now. By Leslie M Lampe, Community Communications Officer since January 2022 The afternoon of the 29th January 2022 is windy and cold. But the sky is glo...
    • 4 Jan 2023
  • Together Let’s Make it Count – this December start getting ready for our 2023 Big Garden Birdwatch

    RSPB’s Morwenna Alldis helps us get ready for the Big Garden Birdwatch, running from 27-29 January 2023, and shares her top tips for feeding your garden birds this winter.   The Big Garden Birdwatch is the world’s largest garden wild...
    • 8 Dec 2022
  • Wild cities in winter – where to find urban wildlife this season

     Urban nature enthusiast and author of 'Wild City' Florence Wilkinson tells us what wildlife to look out for across our towns and cities this winter. At this time of year a lot of our urban wildlife is hidden in the earth beneath our feet;...
    • 31 Oct 2022
  • Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness….

    Autumn, season of mists and mellow fruitfulness and my favourite season to take a walk into the countryside on a crisp bright day. While summer may strike you as the best time to be outside as much as possible – Autumn is also the perfect time ...
    • 6 Oct 2022
  • Gardening with Different Soil Types

    Gardening with different soil types RSPB’s Morwenna Alldis celebrates soily fingers this month as she reveals how to work out your garden’s soil type and which plants will grow best in it. For me one of life’s purest pleasures is to...
    • 31 Aug 2022
  • How to capture & save water, money and time while being wildlife friendly!

    How to capture & save water, money and time while being wildlife friendly! Becca Smith talks about the benefits of installing a water butt into her home & garden, plus other ways she can bring water to the wildlife found in her garden. There...
    • 1 Aug 2022
  • What's living in your lawn?

    What's living in your lawn? That which we call a lawn, with a little bit of planning can become a wildlife paradise and a thing of beauty Hopefully many of you enjoyed taking part in Plantlife’s No Mow May, a nationwide scheme to encourage gard...
    • 10 Jul 2022
  • We’re all a flutter this summer

    We’re all a flutter this summer RSPB’s Morwenna Alldis talks about the importance of giving butterflies a home in our gardens this summer and reveals the best food plants for butterflies and their caterpillars. Painted lady butterfly Van...
    • 30 May 2022
  • Swifts, Wildflowers & Wellbeing

    Swifts, wildflowers & wellbeing -  RSPB’s Katie O’Neill talks to us about the joys of swifts, the Edinburgh Swift City project and how they can help your wellbeing.  Butterflies a fluttering, bluebells unfurling  ...
    • 28 Apr 2022
  • Leave harmful chemicals on the shelf – create a wildlife-friendly outdoor space

    RSPB England’s Rich Morris takes a look at how you can maintain a beautiful and productive garden without having to use harmful chemicals. “Arm yourself against ants”. “Kills weeds and grasses – roots and all”. &ld...
    • 31 Mar 2022
  • Calling all UK wildlife gardening lovers!

    Calling all UK wildlife gardening lovers! RSPB through our Nature on Your Doorstep initiative is looking to shine a spotlight this April on inspirational wildlife-friendly stories and celebrate the havens people have created for nature. We are looki...
    • 3 Mar 2022
  • What to plant in March - best plants for Spring/Summer

    What to plant in March - best plants for Spring/Summer Spring! March is an ideal time to be thinking about your garden for the spring and summer months as the days are beginning to lengthen and it is becoming warmer. There is a vast variety of seeds...
    • 3 Mar 2022
  • Share your space this February: Gardening in community owned spaces

    Image: The garden in winter, having just had the wildflower areas cut and cleared. Credit: Andy Chapman  RSPB Becca Smith speaks to Andy Chapman, former farmer and RSPB volunteer. Sharing is caring, and when it comes to wildlife gardening, t...
    • 20 Jan 2022
  • Wildlife gardening in January – how to attract birds into your winter garden

    RSPB's Nature on Your Doorstep volunteer, Izabela Kennedy shares winter wildlife gardening tips and best ways to attract birds into your garden.  Winter months can pose a challenge for local wildlife, including birds, which become more act...
    • 31 Dec 2021
  • Celebrate National Tree Week

    "The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second best time is now." ― Chinese proverb To celebrate National Tree Week (Saturday 27 November – Sunday 5 December), Morwenna Alldis, Communications Officer for RSPB England, looks to ...
    • 23 Nov 2021
  • For the love of natural lawns – great green spaces for wildlife and people

    A blackbird hops across the lawn, its dark feathers gleaming in the summer sunshine. It pauses for a moment, ducks down and emerges with a worm wriggling in its bright yellow beak. Dusky summer evenings ha...
    • 2 Nov 2021
  • For Peat’s Sake

    A blog posted on behalf of Adrian Thomas. Peat is precious. It grows at about one metre every thousand years, which works out at a measly one millimetre a year. Many of you will be aware of the long-running campaign we have waged against the mass ext...
    • 6 Oct 2021
  • Night-scented plants for moths

    When you think about how you want your garden to be, it’s easy to prioritise how it looks and making sure it’s the right space for you, but what about also making it the right space for wildlife? That doesn’t have to mean letting ev...
    • 10 Aug 2021
  • Helping little green fingers grow

    RSPB’s Morwenna Alldis shares why connecting her toddler to nature is the most important passion she wants to pass onto him. Hannah Page and Natasha Laverick, RSPB new mums too, also share how gardening and discovering nature with their child...
    • 28 Jul 2021
  • Just add water

    One of the best things you can do for nature in your garden is build a pond. Anna Pugh shares her garden pond journey and some of the unexpected wildlife it brought!
    • 22 Jul 2021
  • My Wild Space

    The RSPB's Toby Wilson demonstrates that you don't have to be an expert gardener to make a wildlife friendly garden and to enjoy the nature on your doorstep.  It’s probably best to start with an admission that I am not a good or e...
    • 15 Jul 2021
  • First time garden owner: the daunting prospect of your very own lawn

    RSPB England’s Becca Smith delves into how you can turn your outside space into a functional, wildlife friendly garden on a tight budget – and with very little effort. Being a first-time homeowner can certainly be a daunting prospect, wit...
    • 25 May 2021