Summer Membership Offer
Thank you for your interest in our Summer introductory offer. This offer ran during July 2024 and so has now ended.
You can still help protect your local wildlife by joining Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust as a member today - we would be most grateful for your support. For 60 years, Herts and Middlesex Wildlife Trust has been protecting your local wildlife and the wild places that make our area so special.
But we haven’t done it alone. Our members enable our important conservation work to continue. You can be part of this amazing group of wildlife supporters.
Join the Trust today
What do I get with my membership?
Every person who joins makes a vital difference...
- You will be protecting your local nature
- You will discover your local wildlife and wild places through our Wildscapes guide and members' magazine, Wildlife Matters
- You will join over 23,000 local like-minded people who already support our work
If you become Family Members you will also receive:
- Wildlife Watch children's magazine with posters
- Wildlife Watch membership card and badge
- Nature Activity Guide
What will the Trust do with my support?
The Wildlife Trusts are the only charities that work to protect all native wildlife at a local level. With your support, we can continue our vital conservation work, which includes:
- Caring for nature reserves (99% of people in our area live within five miles of one - chances are there's one down the road from you!)
- Advising and helping others to look after their land for wildlife
- Championing nature with local decision-makers
Protect special wild places near you
We have some of the world’s rarest rivers – chalk streams like the Mimram, Ash and Rib – which number just 260 in the entire world and provide homes for iconic British wildlife such as the endangered Water Vole and striking Kingfisher.
We also have some of the best examples of ancient, and Oak-Hornbeam woodlands in the South East of England – including our new nature reserve Astonbury Wood. Ancient woodlands are a particularly special type of woodland that have developed, undisturbed for centuries – they support an array of wildlife, including many rare and protected species, play a vital role in the fight against climate change, and are unquestionably one of our most important habitats. We can only continue our vital conservation work protecting local wildlife and wild places like these with the help of our members – people like you.