A city park can look ordinary until you realise it's part of a much bigger plan. From Leith Links in Edinburgh, we explore how a citywide Nature Network is being built to tackle biodiversity loss, prepare for climate change, and make neighbourhoods healthier and more beautiful.
Fiona Leith chats to Alexandra Hoadley, Ecologist and Greenspace Development Officer at the City of Edinburgh Council, who explains how mapping and local knowledge has become an action plan of 200-plus projects — including how planters and small habitat patches can matter as much as big parks. Her favourite example: the northern brown argus butterfly and the rock-rose plant acting as stepping stones between key sites.
Then we travel to North Ayrshire, where Biodiversity Officer Neal Lochrie gives a candid look at delivery challenges — public confusion, limited community capacity, and the need to link global climate stories to local species and places. We dig into funding, partnerships, and how shared tools like the NatureScot Nature Networks toolbox help councils move from mapping to action.
If you care about wildlife corridors, wildflower meadows, and greener streets, this one's for you. Subscribe, share with someone who loves their local park, and leave a review with one small action you're willing to try this month.
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