For an overview of practical ways you can save money
and reduce your carbon footprint -
have a look at this page on Wiltshire Council's website
which gives lots of tips and useful information for
(i) your home (ii) when travelling and (iii) your garden.
lots of us doing this can have a big impact
MPs want to know what we care about - their job is to represent us in Parliament. We can ask them to help stop the loss of wildlife, speak up for nature, prioritise climate issues and champion ambitious measures (including strong environment laws) to create a better, nature-friendly world. More details and advice for writing to, or meeting with, your MP.
We are using the equivalent of 1.6 Earths to maintain our current way of life and ecosystems cannot keep up with our demands
Do you need it? Can you make do with less? Can you reuse / use it for something else?
Make space for nature and help turn the UK's 24 million gardens into a life-line network of nature reserves
97% of wildflower meadows lost since 1930 so wildflower-rich verges become essential for nature - each mile can feed millions of pollinators every year.
Wilts Council’s new verge cutting regime is an encouraging start.
efforts to allow habitat for wild flowers and insect life in our verges (where safe) - and enjoy the flowers!
Importance of verges - masses of info, and ways to help in this Natural History Museum article
Since 2015 banks have pumped over £4.4 trillion into supporting the fossil fuel industry.
If food waste were a country, it would be the third largest emitter of greenhouse gases
Just stopping binning bread alone could be as effective as planting 5.3 million trees!
In the UK, 70% of food waste occurs in our homes (4.5 million tonnes of food worth £3.5 billion thrown away every year).
Hedgehogs were put on the IUCN 'Red List' as vulnerable to extinction in Great Britain in 2020. Their decline continues in rural areas:

Buy eco-friendly - many cosmetics, soaps, washing-up liquids and cleaning products can be harmful to wildlife with long-lasting effects.
Avoid disposing of medicines, chemicals, fats or oils down the sink, toilet or drain.
Only flush the three P’s: pee, poop and toilet paper (not even paper hankies or paper towels - these products cause problems because they are designed to absorb water, not disolve in it).
Reduce your use of water wherever you can.
Ask political leaders to make these five key actions General Election pledges to save nature:
A pay-rise for nature.
Make polluters pay.
More space for nature.
A National Nature Service.
A right to a healthy environment.
Take a look at our projects page.
Find out ways in which you can get involved with Wild Colerne.
Learn more about biodiversity, and its relationship with climate change and pollution .