Skip to main content

Auxiliary menu

  • Webcams
  • Contact us
  • Jobs
  • Shop
  • Events
  • Media Requests & Filming on Nature Reserves

Language

  • English
  • Cymraeg

Follow us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
Home

Main navigation

  • About us
    Badger

    Bertie Gregory

    • Our strategy and vision
      • 30 by 30
      • 1 in 4 : Team Wilder
    • Wildlife conservation
      • Our projects
        • Mid Wales Red Squirrel Project
        • Welsh Beaver Project
        • Water Vole Project
        • Marine Conservation in Cardigan Bay
        • Green Connections Powys
      • Climate and Nature Emergency
      • Professional services
    • How we're run
    • How we're funded
    • News
    • Blogs
    • Reports and publications
  • Get involved
    Children standing in front of wooden butterfly

    Madison Bowden-Parry

    • Take Action for Nature
      • Homes and Gardens
      • Communities
      • Youth
        • Stand For Nature
      • Actions to take at home
    • Volunteer
      • On our Nature Reserves and Visitor Centres
      • Corporate Volunteering Packages
    • Local groups
    • Fundraise
      • #WILDFundraiser blog
      • Individuals
      • Businesses
    • Events
      • Welsh Language Events
    • Campaign
      • 30 Days Wild
      • 12 Days Wild - midwinter nature challenge
      • Defend Nature
  • Visit
    Northern Wetlands at Parc Slip

    Gina Gavigan

    • Dog walking on reserves
    • Nature reserves
      • Wildlife code of conduct
    • Skomer Island
    • Skokholm Island
    • Welsh Wildlife Centre & Teifi Marshes
      • Oak Tree Cottage
    • Parc Slip Nature Reserve & Visitor Centre
    • Cardigan Bay Marine Wildlife Centre
  • Learn
    Cowslip and dew-soaked grass as a woman is birdwatching

    Tom Hibbert

    • Species
    • Habitats
    • Wildlife gardening
    • For kids
    • Teachers and home educators
      • Educational Trips To Skomer Island
    • Take action against climate change
    • How to help injured wildlife
    • Webcams
  • Support us
    Dormouse in hand

    Dormouse by Tom Marshall

    • Become a member
    • Adopt an animal
    • Donate to an appeal
    • Become a fundraiser
    • Give a gift in your Will
      • Our Legacy Promises
      • Learn about Legacies
  • Become a member
  • Donate

You are here:

  1. Home
  2. Learn

Learn

Share

  • facebook
  • twitter
  • email
  • whatsapp
walk

Matthew Roberts

Learn

All our lives are better when they're a bit wild

You might want to join one of our training courses or events, use our teaching resources or even find out more about how you can help wildlife at home. Spending time outdoors, learning about nature can make us feel happier, healthier and more connected to the natural world.

People watching Gannet colony
What's on

Events

From walks to talks and nature reserve tours, find out what's happening near you
Wilder Youth. Multiple images of young people engaging with nature.

Wilder Youth

It's vital that today's young people have the opportunities to form life-long connections to nature and have their say in…

robin

Wildlife gardening

Our own back gardens are often the place where we encounter wildlife most regularly. Whether it's digging up worms or feeding the…

My Wild Cardiff minibeasts

Teachers and home educators

We offer staff-led nature reserve visits, school trips, assemblies, outdoor classroom transformations, school outreach and much more!…

school girl with clipboard

Educational Trips To Skomer Island

Packed full of seabirds, endemic species, rare plants, unique geological features and archaeological remains, there's something for…

Hedgehog in short cut grass

How to help injured wildlife

On this page you will find advice on what to do if you come across sick, injured or abandoned animals. There are many Rescue Centre…

#WILDFundraiser Half Marathon holding a big cheque

weCREATE

become a #wildfundraiser

Fundraise for us!

puffin with sand eels in its beak

© Amy Compton

Webcams

Footer decal

What we do

  • Saving wildlife and wild spaces (https://www.welshwildlife.org/about-us)
  • Connecting people with nature (https://www.welshwildlife.org/our-strategy/1-4-team-wilder)
  • Living Landscapes (https://www.welshwildlife.org/about-us/what-we-do/wildlife-conservation/living-landscapes)
  • Living Seas (https://www.welshwildlife.org/about-us/wildlife-conservation/living-seas)

Support us

  • Become a member (https://www.welshwildlife.org/become-member)
  • Donate (https://www.welshwildlife.org/donate)
  • Get involved (https://www.welshwildlife.org/get-involved)

The Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales

  • Privacy policy (https://www.welshwildlife.org/privacy-policy)
  • Accessibility statement (https://www.welshwildlife.org/accessibility)
  • Equality, diversity and inclusion (https://www.welshwildlife.org/equality-diversity-inclusion)
  • Safeguarding Commitment Statement (https://www.welshwildlife.org/sites/default/files/2024-10/The%20Wildlife%20Trusts%20Safeguarding%20Commitment%20Statement.v3docx.docx)
  • Contact us (https://www.welshwildlife.org/contact-us)
Home

The Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales. Registered charity number 1091562.
Regulated by the Fundraising Regulator. Read our fundraising promise here.

 
Home