Look for creatures of the night …
Exciting wildlife like nightjars, moths and glow-worms are best seen at dusk on warm summer evenings. You can venture out on your own – or join one of our guided walks!
Exciting wildlife like nightjars, moths and glow-worms are best seen at dusk on warm summer evenings. You can venture out on your own – or join one of our guided walks!
A moderately strenuous walk at dusk around this post-industrial landscape. We'll see bats, owls, nightjars and glow-worms if we’re lucky! Bring a torch and be prepared for midges.
A moderately strenuous walk at dusk around this post-industrial landscape. We'll see bats, owls, nightjars and glow-worms if we’re lucky! Bring a torch and be prepared for midges.
A moderately strenuous walk at dusk around this post-industrial landscape. We'll see bats, owls, nightjars and glow-worms if we’re lucky! Bring a torch and be prepared for midges.
Ania and Becky know that wildlife can be found in unexpected places at unusual times, and surveying bats in the centre of Taunton at night is nothing out of the ordinary for them.
In the drama of the open spaces around her, Emily can play the role of a lifetime. She knows the wildlife of the nature reserve as intimately as Yorick knew Hamlet, and with an audience of birds,…
Look – a boatman! Keira’s delight in learning about unusual creatures is even more special when she can find them herself.
The tops of Oarweed fronds can be spotted floating on low tides. Kelp beds are an important habitat, providing shelter for many other marine creatures.
Risso’s dolphins are mysterious creatures usually only found in deep, offshore waters.
These gruesome sounding creatures are actually a type of coral! They get their name as they branch out into lobes as they grow - making them look like fingers on a hand.
Reed sweet-grass is a towering grass with large, loose flower heads that can be found on marshy ground near rivers, streams and ponds. It can become invasive, but does shelter various aquatic…
These mysterious and beautiful creatures rely on warm ocean currents to ‘sail’ them around the world... not a bad life?