RSPCA calls for more volunteers to sign up for Big Help Out as part of Sussex Coronation celebrations

The RSPCA is urging wildlife lovers to sign up for a volunteering role to mark King Charles III’s Coronation, as part of the Big Help Out on Monday, May 8.
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About 650 people have already pledged to undertake a wide variety of tasks to nurture wildlife in their gardens or communities, by signing up as RSPCA ‘Wildlife Friends’.

Many have already been busy carrying out jobs such as planting wildlife-friendly flowers, building dead hedges and making bug hotels using old logs.

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Catherine Peerless and her family were among those joining the animal charity’s volunteers as they spent time making a dead wood insect mansion. Their work was inspired by staff at RSPCA Mallydams Wood Wildlife Centre in East Sussex who created a film explaining how to complete the task. The family used logs they bought from a local animal charity and drilled holes in them of different sizes to accommodate different creatures.

Wren and Robyn are among volunteers who have become ‘Wildlife Friends’ to mark King Charles III’s Coronation, as part of the Big Help Out on Monday, May 8.Wren and Robyn are among volunteers who have become ‘Wildlife Friends’ to mark King Charles III’s Coronation, as part of the Big Help Out on Monday, May 8.
Wren and Robyn are among volunteers who have become ‘Wildlife Friends’ to mark King Charles III’s Coronation, as part of the Big Help Out on Monday, May 8.

They plan to plant grasses between the logs which are sited in a wildlife area which Catherine’s children, Robyn, 8, and Wren, 10, helped create during lockdown. The children are to submit their efforts as part of their work towards a green Blue Peter badge.

Robyn said: "It was really good fun drilling the holes in the wood and then bashing them with a hammer to get them deep into the ground. We saw lots of centipedes and bugs on the logs and we told them they'd have new neighbours soon.

"There wasn't much in our garden when we first moved in but we've planted a hedgerow, put in plants which we know insects like, put up bird feeders and created a huge bug home made of pallets and pine cones and twigs. Now we see more butterflies and birds coming in and we also see bats in the evening."

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Wren added: "It was my first time using the drill which was a bit scary. It was really good fun making all the different holes and imagining what creatures will live in there.”

The RSPCA has a number of suggestions for the tasks that Wildlife Friends could accomplish - they include:

- Building a bird box

- Getting together with friends for a litter pick

- Creating a wildlife-friendly space with neighbours

- Planting wildlife-friendly plants in gardens/window boxes

- Joining ‘No mow May’ to make a habitat for butterflies, bees and insects in gardens

- Recreating wildlife-friendly ideas from RHS Chelsea

RSPCA lead wildlife officer Geoff Edmond said: “Spring is with us and it is a really busy time for wildlife. Some of our animals are making families and they need our help.

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“We get joy from nature and that is good for us, but we need to look after it and care for it. We can all make a difference. The RSPCA is delighted to be taking part in the King’s Big Help Out, so I would urge people to sign up and become a ‘Wildlife Friend’. This is an exciting new venture in which people can make a difference for wildlife where they live.

“We want to help make the world a safer and better place for wildlife and people can help by throwing themselves into simple tasks that are easy to do and they can also be completed close to home.”

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