The recycling team

Hallswood is nothing without our volunteers and the recycling team is no exception!
With Susan Simpson in charge, we have had many thousands of pounds donated to Hallswood thanks to the Terracycle scheme since it started. Add to that the tonnes saved from going to landfill and there really are no downsides to this 🙂

A big thank you to all the helpers making this possible - You are heroes in more ways than one.
Emma, Gillian, Tanya, Ann, David, Tom, Kevin, Ashley, Sandra, Jake, Dave, Szara, Jane, Tracy and Diane: Thank you for being awesome 🙂

Sandra Lumbard

Sandra Lumbard is one of those people who seem to always be on the go. Sitting down and doing nothing is just not a thing 😀
Not only does she volunteer with Hallswood but our friends at PACT too!

Hi Sandra!

First things first: how did you find Hallswood?
-Just over 2 years ago Lyz posted that she needed urgent accommodation for 3 cats. I watched the post all day but and eventually messaged asking if the situation was resolved, 'no', we are desperate. I said 'I don't do cats but there is a cattery at the house I have bought you can us'. Since then there's been about 24 foster cats and 1 foster dog from Hallswood!

And how long have you been volunteering now and what did you help with before lockdown?
Could you tell our followers about the amazing things you did to help us through lockdown?
-During lockdown I have had a charity stall at my gate. I also accepted recycling here.

How much have you raised so far? I say so far because I do believe that you still have a GoFundMe page up and running?
What is your favourite part of helping Hallswood?
-Favourite part is fostering the cats!

And dare I ask what the worst part is?
-Worst part is sorting the recycling.

What would you say to encourage someone to help us by joining our crazy family of volunteers?
-I would encourage anyone to volunteer, it feels great to be valued and there is a huge variety of things you can do donating as much or as little of you time as you want.

Famous last words: what is your favourite saying?
-Favourite saying is a bit morbid but I always say ' I can sit still when I'm dead, there will be more than enough time then'

Foot print trap

Have you ever wondered what goes on in your garden at night? Sometimes we hear squeaks and bird calls, other times we hear strange noises we can’t identify. If we are lucky enough to have snow, we might see all sorts of footprints, but we don’t get snow very often, so why don’t we make a trap to catch the footprints in the autumn!  

For this activity, you will need an old baking tray, or borrow a plant tray from a greenhouse. Maybe you could find something else to use, as long as it has low sides it will work.  

Then you need some fine sand - do you know anybody with a sandpit? Perhaps they would let you borrow some? Pour the sand into the tray and make it damp, smooth the top as carefully as you can, then place a bowl of meaty cat or dog food in the middle of it.  Place the tray in a quiet spot in your garden. Now comes the really hard bit, you need to wait overnight to check for the local wildlife to find and eat the food!  You can probably expect to find a few cat paw prints too!

What footprints will you find?

Here are some useful links to help you identify the prints
https://www.wildlifetrusts.org/how-identify/identify-tracks

https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/blog/2017/12/animal-tracks-snow-print-identification/

Apple gingerbread

Image by Rebekka D from Pixabay

APPLE GINGERBREAD

Reducing food waste is something that we all should try aiming for and what better way than making something absolutely delicious with those sad and wrinkly apples left in the fruit bowl?

Yum 🙂

 

 

 

225g cooking apples peeled cored and chopped with 25g soft brown sugar  (or raid the bottom of your fruit bowl for any apples that have gone a little wrinkly that need using up!)

50g soft brown sugar

100g golden syrup or date syrup

75g butter

150g self raising flour

2 tsp ground ginger

2 tsp ground cinnamon

1 beaten egg

 

This is a really lovely moist ginger cake, great served warm with ice cream or custard as a pudding or with a steamy cup of tea for an afternoon pick me up! Try and make the most of the last of the fallen Bramleys, or any apples slightly past their best to reduce food waste.  You could also add some grated lemon zest to this if you fancied it

 

Cook the apples with 25g sugar and 2 tbs water over a low hear until soft.  Beat to a purée and leave to cool. If you are using eating apples you don’t need to add any sugar.

Place  50g sugar, syrup and butter in a large pan and gently melt.

Sift the flour with the spices.

Stir in the sifted flour, beaten egg and apple purée into the melted mix.

Grease and line a loaf tin, pour mix in and bake at 180C for 40 mins until cooked through. Cool in tin slightly then turn out onto wire rack to cool.

 

Enjoy it!

The humble hedgehog

There are some distressing photos at the end of this post - watch at readers' own discretion.

The humble hedgehog is possibly one of the main animals that come to our rescue.
Every year many, many hundreds cross our threshold and I must admit that for me they are one of the most special little creatures we have on this island we call home.

Wild at heart; it is like they know from birth where they belong. Little hoglets often huff and puff to show you how scary and dangerous they think they are and unlike many other animals, they almost never seem to like us humans, or even get used to us. Obviously, this makes helping them a little bit easier as we don’t have to worry too much about imprinting, unlike for example foxes. Saying that handling is always kept at a minimum. It is easy to forget that for the hedgehog you are a big scary predator and cuddles are stressful for them, not comforting.

Two of the most common questions we get about us and hedgehogs are:
1. Why are they brought to us and 2. Why do we bother (It’s “just a hedgehog”)
Both questions are both easy and hard to answer at the same time but here we go.

Hedgehogs are brought to us because they are in trouble and we save them because no creature deserves to suffer. That is the simple answer.
When you start to dive deeper it’s a bit more complex; what kind of trouble do they often find themselves in for example. Road traffic accidents are sadly very common and when it comes to tiny things like hedgehogs the outcome is usually instant death. In spring it’s mostly garden related injuries and these are often brutal. Strimmers cause horrific injuries to hedgehogs and often they are brought to us after flies have got to them – wounds with fly eggs and maggots are not just horrible to see but imagine the pain for the poor hog. Being eaten alive!  Strimmer injuries are so easy to prevent; either don’t use strimmers at all or check the area thoroughly before using a strimmer. Remember that hogs don’t run when they are in danger, they curl up! Plus, they sleep daytime when we are more likely to do gardening.
Slug pellets are another culprit. You might think it’s just going to harm the slugs but instead, it harms anything that eats them too! Bonfires cause damage and death all year round as very few of us actually check before we light. Before you light a bonfire, you should ALWAYS move it.

Summer months bring flystrike and dehydration. Hedgehogs smell, like reaaaaaally smells and for a fly that is irresistible. Flies will lay their eggs around the skirt of the hog (the soft fur just under the last row of spines) and inside ears, around eyes, or any wounds. Contrary to popular belief a fly will not only lay eggs in wounds but on anything that smells right or provide the right habitat for the hatching maggots. In hot weather, these eggs hatch really fast and without going into too many details the hatched maggots are hungry. This is why it is SUPER important that if you find a hog in trouble, you catch it, put it somewhere safe and covered (with air holes of course), and THEN you call a rescue. Never put a source of heat with a hedgehog with flystrike, also never wash a hedgehog, ever!

Autumn brings the babies. Hedgehogs will breed till hibernation and with the seasons changing so much often they can have 2-3 litters in a year. Hibernation is triggered by cold, not a certain date of the year! We have seen some posts stating that hedgehogs outside after a certain date is automatically in trouble. This is not true. The last litter will sometimes arrive really late and the hoglets will not get enough time to put weight on to survive hibernation. These are the autumn juveniles and these are often the ones that will stay with us all through winter.

So what do you do if you find a hedgehog in need of help?
Step one is to ensure that it does need help in the first place.

A few pointers to make it easier:
1. A hedgehog will NEVER be out sunbathing. We often get phone calls about “a hedgehog that is sunbathing in my garden but it’s not moved all day”. If you see a hedgehog laying in the middle of a path or grass, get it somewhere safe asap!

Image by Alexas_Fotos from Pixabay

2. In general hedgehogs should not be out daytime, however, if the hog looks like it is going somewhere, maybe with bedding in its mouth it is probably ok, if you take it you might end up leaving some hungry hoglets abandoned in a nearby nest. If you are in doubt please ALWAYS call someone and check. Better safe than sorry!

3. If it is freezing outside or very late in the autumn, and you see a baby hedgehog out it probably needs help. Scoop it up, put it somewhere safe and warm and then call us or someone else for advice. Anything smaller than a mango is probably in need of help.
A hedgehog the size of a pineapple is probably totally fine (unless injured). Always feel free to call for advice if you are unsure!

4. A source of heat is great but only if the hedgehog does NOT have flystrike.
For a source of heat, you can use anything from a hot water bottle to an empty jam jar or bottle with hot water. Remember to not put the hedgehog on top of the source of heat but rather next to it so that it can move away if it gets too hot. Never put the hedgehog in a box with wet bedding. Just because it lives in the wild does not mean that cold, wet leaves or grass, or soaked straw is any good.

5. Last but not least: Don't keep an injured animal for a few days to see if it gets better. The majority of hedgehogs that we lose die because they are brought in too late.

 Hedgehog stuck in rubbish. If you see things in nature. pick it up and dispose of it. It might not be your litter but it is our planet! Sadly this hedgehog was dead when found.

One or two ticks is not really a big deal but many could lead to problems.

 

Strimmer injuries are horrific and often leads to long and extreme suffering. Please check before using any gardening tools.

Flystrike looks like small grains of rice clumped together. If you see these on an animal they need help as soon as possible and should NOT be put on heat. Not to be confused with ticks.

Don't ever put flea treatment on a hedgehog without getting advice from a qualified wildlife rescue first. This hedgehog almost died after a vet practice treated it with the wrong medication. It is important to remember that most vets are specialized in domestic animals, not wildlife.

Posthole or deathtrap? We were called out to rescue little hog from this one and almost didn't manage to get him out!

Man-made materials such as garden netting might keep your plants nice and tidy but it can also cause horrible injuries to wildlife. Please keep it off the ground!

Lockdown help – A thank you post!

Living in a world like ours can often make you feel small and insignificant.
Often we hear the phrase “What can I do? I’m just one person” and I know that even though I try not to, I often feel this way myself. Sometimes it feels like society is here telling us that we can’t change things and that we only matter if we are rich and know the right people.
I am telling you that is not true.

When the crisis started and Lyz and I sat down to talk about the worst-case scenarios, neither of us actually wanted to believe that our shops would be forced to close down. Only days after our meeting it became more and more apparent that that was the way things were heading. How do you go from running a sanctuary with 3 successful shops and many well-attended events to nothing? It was a daunting and scary thought.

Fast forward to today.
Over the last few months we have seen such love and support. Together YOU have shown us that we are not alone, that we will be ok. We will get through this! Don’t get me wrong, we are not there yet but we are AHEAD of it.

At the end of this post, you will find one of my all-time favorite stories and I hope that you will find it as inspirational as I do. It tells me that as much as I can’t save the world, I can save part of it.
As much as I am just one person, for someone I am everything.
As much as I can’t afford £3,500 to pay for a month's feed, I can afford a few pounds, and together with your £1 or £10 that will get us there.

So, next time you feel small and unimportant just remember this: You matter. You can make a difference. And don’t let anyone tell you differently.

“A young girl was walking along a beach upon which thousands of starfish had been washed up during a terrible storm. When she came to each starfish, she would pick it up, and throw it back into the ocean. People watched her with amusement.
She had been doing this for some time when a man approached her and said, “Little girl, why are you doing this? Look at this beach! You can’t save all these starfish. You can’t begin to make a difference!”
The girl seemed crushed, suddenly deflated. But after a few moments, she bent down, picked up another starfish, and hurled it as far as she could into the ocean. Then she looked up at the man and replied, “Well, I made a difference to that one!”
The old man looked at the girl inquisitively and thought about what she had done and said. Inspired, he joined the little girl in throwing starfish back into the sea. Soon others joined, and all the starfish were saved.”

The same goes for Hallswood Animal Sanctuary.
We can’t save every animal but for the ones we save, it means everything.

Help us help them

How much is £1

£1 is one of the many overwintering hedgehogs in our care fed for a few days
£1 is 12 syringes bought to be used feeding hungry kittens
£1 is straw for a warm bedded stable for one of our ponies
£1 a nutritious meal for 3 baby birds
£1 is a light in our animal hospital, or a heat pad keeping a hoglet warm
£1 put with someone else’s £1 is £2 and then one more and its £3 and before you know it we build another building, make room for more animals, save more lives

£1 might not sound a lot but to us and the animals and birds we care for £1 can be the difference between life and death.

£1 might not buy you a fancy coffee but it could help save a life
PayPal.me/Hallswood

How to make a Half – Term Birdfeeder!

You will need:-

Some birdseed,

Some crusts or stale bread

Dried fruit (see if you can gather the bits that have fallen out of the bag into the cupboard!)

Lard (about 40p from supermarkets)

Grated cheese - any stale or gone hard cheese is brilliant

Peanuts

String or wool

You will also need to get your wellies on and go out for a walk by some pine trees to gather up some fir cones to form your bird feeder. If you don’t fancy getting soggy, you could use an old yogurt pot, or a teacup. See what you can find in the recycling to use!

 

Let’s get going! Take your chosen bird feed container and tie some string around it, use the tip of the fir cone or the handle of the teacup. If you are using recycling items, you will need to punch a hole through them to put the string through. Remember to make your piece of string long enough to be able to hang the feeder from a bird table or tree branch.

Put the birdseed into a large bowl. Add the bread, grating it into smaller pieces, or if it isn’t too stale, pull it into small pieces with your fingers. Pop the dried fruit in, sultanas, raisins, whatever you have. Add the cheese and the peanuts and stir it all up. You will need an adult to melt the lard for you as it can get ferociously hot! Mix the melted fat into the dry ingredients and stir well, let it cool for 10 minutes, then after checking the mix isn’t too hot to handle, push the mix into the gaps in the fir cone, try and get it really full of the feed mix. This will make your hands feel super slimy! Alternatively, put the mix into your chosen container. Leave it in a cold place to set and then hang it outside and see how long it takes for the birds to find!

I wonder what type of bird the first one to come and feed will be?

Please let us know!!!