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East Yorkshire hedgehog charity 'inundated' due to heat

BBC Published Jul 2, 2026 Reviewed Jul 4, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Holderness Hedgehog Hospital is currently looking after 86 hedgehogs and hoglets.
86 animals · hedgehogs and hoglets
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Cath Novis, trustee of Holderness Hedgehog Hospital, stated that the charity has never seen so many hedgehogs in its care at this time of year.
86 animals · hedgehogs and hoglets
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Cath Novis, trustee of Holderness Hedgehog Hospital, said that mother hedgehogs may abandon their nests due to food and water shortages caused by hot weather.
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Cath Novis, trustee of Holderness Hedgehog Hospital, said high temperatures could cause a shortage of water for hedgehogs to drink.
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A hedgehog rescue charity says it is has "never seen" so many animals in its care at this time of year.

Holderness Hedgehog Hospital said it was looking after 86 animals - most are young hedgehogs, known as hoglets.

Charity trustee Cath Novis said she believed it could be down to the recent hot weather.

She added: "The ground is so hard that the hedgehogs can't go digging for worms, insects, and everything else that they eat."

She said high temperatures could also cause a shortage of water for the animals to drink.

"We ask people that they put down lots of water - not only for the hedgehogs, but for the birds and other wildlife as well."

Novis added these pressures on food and water could lead to mother hedgehogs abandoning their nests.

"It's a case of self-preservation. She leaves the hoglets and hence why the rescues are so inundated."

The charity treats animals brought to them for fleas, checking for internal parasites, feeding them, and then weaning them.

"Every second counts in the life of a hedgehog," she added.

Listen to highlights from Hull and East Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North.

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