Other winners include Holy Trinity and St John’s CEP School, Margate for their Woodland School site within their grounds. It has been developed from scratch over the past three years and is considered to be the biggest and best classroom in the school. The children love spending time in the oasis of green which is tucked in amongst the urban heart of Margate.
Also recognised was Lynsted Kitchen Garden, a local food growing initiative that has become a hub of community action to reduce food miles and to respond to the climate and nature emergency. They follow a permaculture approach with an emphasis on ensuring a healthy soil, rich in micro-organisms and biodiversity. Using the ‘no dig’ technique they run open days and workshops throughout the year.
Whether you're putting up bird boxes, sewing wildflower meadows, planting vegetable gardens, or reducing the amount of energy you use, you can gain recognition for your actions through the Wilder Kent Awards.
Another Wilder Kent Award winner and nature hero is Pennies Day Nursery in Maidstone who have actively put sustainability at the heart of their work since 2020. Recognising that small changes have a big impact, they grow their own food, compost, and tend to their vegetable patches and nursery garden. Most recently they have formed a forest school.
Kent Wildlife Trust has now launched the Wilder Kent Awards for 2024-2025 and is encouraging people to sign up and showcase their efforts in making the county wilder.
Kent Wildlife Trust’s Tom White, who coordinates the Awards said:
"The Wilder Kent Awards are a way of recognising and rewarding schools and community groups who are taking positive actions for nature and wildlife in Kent. Whether you're putting up bird boxes, sewing wildflower meadows, planting vegetable gardens, or reducing the amount of energy you use, you can gain recognition for your actions through the Wilder Kent Awards and join a growing army in Kent in the fight against the climate and nature crisis."