Coastal explorer - Knott End
For National Marine Week we'll have the opportunity to discover what's living on our shores & in our seas, searching the strandline together
For National Marine Week we'll have the opportunity to discover what's living on our shores & in our seas, searching the strandline together
For National Marine Week we'll have the opportunity to discover what's living on our shores & in our seas, searching the strandline together
For National Marine Week we'll have the opportunity to discover what's living on our shores & in our seas, searching the strandline together
For National Marine Week we'll have the opportunity to discover what's living on our shores & in our seas, searching the strandline together
One of our largest and most impressive solitary wasps, the bee wolf digs a nest in sandy spots and hunts honey bees.
Join WTBCN Chief Executive Brian Eversham and learn about the ecology and behaviour of invertebrates and why they matter
Honey bees are famous for the honey they produce! These easily recognisable little bees are hard workers, living in large hives made of wax honeycombs.
The bee orchid is a sneaky mimic - the flower’s velvety lip looks like a female bee. Males fly in to try to mate with it and end up pollinating the flower. Sadly, the right bee species doesn’t…
The red mason bee is a common, gingery bee that can be spotted nesting in the crumbling mortar of old walls. Encourage bees to nest in your garden by putting out a tin can full of short, hollow…
Join Margaret Lovering, beekeeper and entrepreneur, as she tells all about bees, wax and the medicinal benefits of eating and using honey.
The ivy bee is a new arrival to the UK. First recorded here in 2001, it is slowly spreading north. It feeds mainly on the nectar of ivy flowers and can be seen in autumn when this plant is in…
The Royal Horticultural Society and The Wildlife Trusts launch gardening campaign to help wild bees