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Section: Wildlife

Why more and more bird lovers are hanging a wool heart in their garden instead of feeding stations — and what's behind it.

Natural nesting material in use — breeding birds accept it instinctively.

the modern garden has everything — except what chicks need to survive.

Feeding stations, birdhouses, suet balls – for many garden owners, these have long been standard features. And yet, something crucial is missing: the soft, natural material with which breeding birds line their nests. In modern, manicured gardens, it has almost completely disappeared.

 

The birds search anyway. And they take what they find: strips of plastic bags, synthetic yarn, nylon string.

the first thing a chick feels is the nest. and too often it's plastic.

Experts call it thread entanglement . Synthetic fibres don't give—they retain their shape, even as a chick grows. Thin threads can wrap around a leg, a wing, or a neck. Ornithologists like Dr. Sarah Holloway, formerly of the RSPB, see this every spring at bird sanctuaries in the North: "By the time the problem becomes visible, it's usually too late."

 

Hardly anyone talks about it. Hardly anyone knows about it.

A typical garden nest. Natural fibres are hardly to be found anymore — birds take what they can get.

"We regularly see cases of thread entanglement in bird sanctuaries every spring — young birds with synthetic fibres around their legs or necks, collected by their parent in a neighbour's garden. Natural fibres like alpaca wool give way and decompose. Synthetics do not. That's the whole difference.

Dr. Sarah Holloway

Dr. Sarah Holloway / Ornithologist & bird conservation consultant · Former RSPB field researcher, Yorkshire

for breeding birds, everything begins in the nest.

The nest is no accident—it's the first protection a chick has. The nest is the chick's first environment: what's inside determines the temperature, comfort, and chances of survival in the first few days after hatching. The material determines the nest's quality —soft, natural fibres insulate, adapt, and decompose reliably. Synthetic materials do none of that. And natural materials are becoming increasingly scarce: lawnmowers, pesticides, manicured gardens—what birds found for millennia has almost disappeared.

in hawes, in the yorkshire dales, the solution has been hanging in the cherry tree for five years.

A retired teacher stumbled upon the simplest answer to this problem by chance. Not as an expert, but simply because she observed every morning.

Anne Merton (66) in Hawes, Yorkshire Dales. Thirty years of primary school teaching

the wool that nobody wanted — and the birds that were just waiting for it.

Hawes, Yorkshire Dales, March. Anne Merton has been drinking her morning coffee in the same spot for twenty years—a wooden chair, a covered terrace, a view of the old cherry tree. Her husband, William, has kept their alpaca herd for almost twenty years. Every spring they shear, and every year they harvest a few kilos of soft wool. What isn't used eventually ends up in the compost—or the rubbish.

The first heart William ever bent. Still crooked. Still on the same branch.

When Anne retired in 2019, William bent a small heart out of garden wire as a farewell gift, filled it with a handful of fresh wool, and hung it on the cherry tree. Not as a work of art. Just because.

 

Two weeks later, wrens had stripped it bare.

 

Anne sat with her coffee every morning and watched. Time and time again, she followed the same path to the tree, each time carrying a thread of soft wool back towards the shed roof. When the nest was finished, she could see it from the terrace—a round, silvery-grey dish under the eaves, containing four eggs.

 

All four hatched.

The nest that the wrens built from William's first heart. Soft alpaca wool, no plastic, all four chicks hatched.

"for two years i simply gave them away."

Anne made more hearts. William bent the frames from spare wire, she filled them with the season's wool. One on the fence post by the road. One in the apple tree. One on the corner post of the shed.

Anne fills each heart by hand — using only the softest inner wool, the kind that birds themselves would choose.

Until May, there was more breeding activity in the garden than in all the previous years. Wrens, great tits, and a pair of blue tits that had never nested on the property before.

 

The neighbours noticed it. Then they asked. Then they simply came by.

 

"I never thought about charging money for it," says Anne. "The wool was already there. William could bend the wire. And the birds needed it."

Anne in her garden in Hawes. The herd has been grazing here for almost twenty years. This summer will be the last.

what anne's wool heart can do that no other product can.

The frame's "grasping geometry." The heart-shaped frame isn't decorative—it's functional. The curved inner edge gives birds multiple gripping points from which they can pull out the wool at different angles. A straight basket or box doesn't offer this.

 

The hand-bent 4mm steel frame. William bends each frame individually from 4mm iron wire. No casting, no stamping. Its strength makes it weatherproof and ensures it lasts for years — even if it hangs outside all winter.

 

The "zero-lanolin filling." Sheep's wool contains lanolin—wool grease that birds instinctively avoid. Alpaca wool contains no lanolin. No acclimatisation, no hesitation. Breeding birds accept it from day one.

 

Hand-picked — undercoat, not guard hair. Anne fills only the soft undercoat — the fibres that lie directly against the alpacas' bodies. The coarse outer coat is excluded. The result: exceptionally fine, supple fibres that feel like a feather bed to chicks.

 

The warmth of hollow fibres. Alpaca fibres are hollow at their core—like a tiny thermos. They insulate better than cotton or synthetics of the same weight. In the first days of a chick's life, this makes all the difference.

 

A timeless design with a refill system. The frame won't rust through, it will develop a patina. It will still be hanging next year—and the year after. The heart comes with a refill pack of pure wool. Once the birds have emptied the first filling, it's ready to go again.

 

"Birds instinctively know what works," says Anne. "You don't have to explain it to them. The first heart I hung up had a bird on it within an hour."

Look what happens when you hang it up. The birds know immediately what it is.

🪡

Hanging

On a branch, fence post or railing — somewhere birds would pass by anyway.

🐦

Birds FIND IT

They pull out the wool themselves. No luring, no acclimation necessary.

🥚

Nests are formed

Softly lined, warm, no plastic. Just as it should be.

where can you buy anne's alpaca heart?

Not at the garden centre. Exclusively via CraftingFolk — the small shop that Anne's daughter Emma set up at Christmas 2025 while Anne was baking cookies next door. "She simply showed me the shop when it was finished."

 

Behind every heart are two people. William in his workshop, his hands rough from the wire. Anne at the kitchen table, handful after handful of wool. He bends it. She fills it. And every time a heart is finished, Anne thinks the same thing: that somewhere out there a bird is waiting for it. That it will arrive in time. That the chicks hatching inside will have a chance.

"this summer is the end. after this, there will be no more nesting hearts."

Anne and William are moving. A smaller house, closer to family in Leeds—the grandchildren are coming, and at some point, you just can't wait any longer. The property in Hawes, the cherry tree, the terrace with the wooden chair—everything is left behind. The alpacas are going to the neighbour's farm. William'S workshop is being packed up. No more bending wire. No more shearing.

 

This batch is the last one ever. Not the last this season. The very last. Knowing this, Emma launched a significant discount campaign for the last remaining hearts —to ensure they all find homes before they're gone forever. Only a few dozen remain.

 

Anne doesn't use many words. But when she talks about the birds, you can hear it in her voice.

"I'm worried. I really am. I see it every morning—they search and search, and what they find is plastic. Threads, bags, string. And I know what that means when the chicks hatch. I can't get it out of my head."

She pauses briefly.

 

"These last hearts—I just want them to hang somewhere. In a garden. On a branch. Somewhere where a bird can find them. That's all I want. For the wool to end up where it belongs—and not in a bin bag."

get your nestingheart now

Last batch · No more stock · Ships within 2 working days

📦 What you get: The alpaca wool heart + refill pack of virgin wool from the last shearing of the Merton's herd.

That's what Anne wanted from the very beginning. No plastic. Real wool. Birds that can nest safely.

here's what customers say:

4.8

Over 7,000 sold — rated exclusively by verified buyers

Janet O.

✓ Verified

3 days ago

"I've never experienced anything like this before."

I hung it on the garden fence two weeks ago—and by the third day, a blue tit was coming every morning. I've hung up suet balls for years, but I've never seen anything like this. My granddaughter now wants to watch it every morning before school.

Karen L.

✓ Verified

1 week ago

"By the end of the week, someone had started building."

To be honest, I'd never really thought about nesting material before. Since learning about the plastic problem, I check every bird's nest. I hung one in the apple tree—by the end of the week, someone had started building it. It'll stay there all year round now.

Thomas C.

✓ Verified

2 weeks ago

"You can immediately tell that someone didn't just build a product."

I ordered two — one for me, one for my mother. When I told her the story, she burst into tears. You can tell immediately that someone didn't just build a product like that.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I buy it?

Exclusively available at CraftingFolks — Anne's little shop. Not a garden centre. The hearts are handmade and shipped individually.

 

How much longer will it be available?

As long as this batch lasts. Once it's gone, there won't be any more—not next season, not in a year. William has packed up his workshop. This is truly the last of what's left.

 

Is it possible to test it without risk?

Yes. 30-day money-back guarantee, no questions asked. If the birds don't accept it, you get your money back. But honestly, in five years, no one has returned it.

see remaining stock here

Liam R.

✓ Verified

4 days ago

"The first bird arrived within a day."

I hung it up on Saturday, and by Sunday morning a great tit was already sitting on it, pecking at it. I could hardly believe it. My husband initially thought I was exaggerating—until he saw it himself.

get your nestingheart now

Why more and more bird lovers are hanging a wool heart in their garden instead of feeding stations — and what's behind it.

Natural nesting material in use — breeding birds accept it instinctively.

the modern garden has everything — except what chicks need to survive.

Feeding stations, birdhouses, suet balls – for many garden owners, these have long been standard features. And yet, something crucial is missing: the soft, natural material with which breeding birds line their nests. In modern, manicured gardens, it has almost completely disappeared.

 

The birds search anyway. And they take what they find: strips of plastic bags, synthetic yarn, nylon string.

the first thing a chick feels is the nest. and too often it's plastic.

Experts call it thread entanglement . Synthetic fibres don't give—they retain their shape, even as a chick grows. Thin threads can wrap around a leg, a wing, or a neck. Ornithologists like Dr. Sarah Holloway, formerly of the RSPB, see this every spring at bird sanctuaries in the North: "By the time the problem becomes visible, it's usually too late."

 

Hardly anyone talks about it. Hardly anyone knows about it.

A typical garden nest. Natural fibres are hardly to be found anymore — birds take what they can get.

"We regularly see cases of thread entanglement in bird sanctuaries every spring — young birds with synthetic fibres around their legs or necks, collected by their parent in a neighbour's garden. Natural fibres like alpaca wool give way and decompose. Synthetics do not. That's the whole difference.

Dr. Sarah Holloway

Dr. Sarah Holloway / Ornithologist & bird conservation consultant · Former RSPB field researcher, Yorkshire

for breeding birds, everything begins in the nest.

The nest is no accident—it's the first protection a chick has. The nest is the chick's first environment: what's inside determines the temperature, comfort, and chances of survival in the first few days after hatching. The material determines the nest's quality —soft, natural fibres insulate, adapt, and decompose reliably. Synthetic materials do none of that. And natural materials are becoming increasingly scarce: lawnmowers, pesticides, manicured gardens—what birds found for millennia has almost disappeared.

in hawes, in the yorkshire dales, the solution has been hanging in the cherry tree for five years.

A retired teacher stumbled upon the simplest answer to this problem by chance. Not as an expert, but simply because she observed every morning.

Anne Merton (66) in Hawes, Yorkshire Dales. Thirty years of primary school teaching

the wool that nobody wanted — and the birds that were just waiting for it.

Hawes, Yorkshire Dales, March. Anne Merton has been drinking her morning coffee in the same spot for twenty years—a wooden chair, a covered terrace, a view of the old cherry tree. Her husband, William, has kept their alpaca herd for almost twenty years. Every spring they shear, and every year they harvest a few kilos of soft wool. What isn't used eventually ends up in the compost—or the rubbish.

The first heart William ever bent. Still crooked. Still on the same branch.

When Anne retired in 2019, William bent a small heart out of garden wire as a farewell gift, filled it with a handful of fresh wool, and hung it on the cherry tree. Not as a work of art. Just because.

 

Two weeks later, wrens had stripped it bare.

 

Anne sat with her coffee every morning and watched. Time and time again, she followed the same path to the tree, each time carrying a thread of soft wool back towards the shed roof. When the nest was finished, she could see it from the terrace—a round, silvery-grey dish under the eaves, containing four eggs.

 

All four hatched.

The nest that the wrens built from William's first heart. Soft alpaca wool, no plastic, all four chicks hatched.

"for two years i simply gave them away."

Anne made more hearts. William bent the frames from spare wire, she filled them with the season's wool. One on the fence post by the road. One in the apple tree. One on the corner post of the shed.

Anne fills each heart by hand — using only the softest inner wool, the kind that birds themselves would choose.

Until May, there was more breeding activity in the garden than in all the previous years. Wrens, great tits, and a pair of blue tits that had never nested on the property before.

 

The neighbours noticed it. Then they asked. Then they simply came by.

 

"I never thought about charging money for it," says Anne. "The wool was already there. William could bend the wire. And the birds needed it."

Anne in her garden in Hawes. The herd has been grazing here for almost twenty years. This summer will be the last.

what anne's wool heart can do that no other product can.

The frame's "grasping geometry." The heart-shaped frame isn't decorative—it's functional. The curved inner edge gives birds multiple gripping points from which they can pull out the wool at different angles. A straight basket or box doesn't offer this.

 

The hand-bent 4mm steel frame. William bends each frame individually from 4mm iron wire. No casting, no stamping. Its strength makes it weatherproof and ensures it lasts for years — even if it hangs outside all winter.

 

The "zero-lanolin filling." Sheep's wool contains lanolin—wool grease that birds instinctively avoid. Alpaca wool contains no lanolin. No acclimatisation, no hesitation. Breeding birds accept it from day one.

 

Hand-picked — undercoat, not guard hair. Anne fills only the soft undercoat — the fibres that lie directly against the alpacas' bodies. The coarse outer coat is excluded. The result: exceptionally fine, supple fibres that feel like a feather bed to chicks.

 

The warmth of hollow fibres. Alpaca fibres are hollow at their core—like a tiny thermos. They insulate better than cotton or synthetics of the same weight. In the first days of a chick's life, this makes all the difference.

 

A timeless design with a refill system. The frame won't rust through, it will develop a patina. It will still be hanging next year—and the year after. The heart comes with a refill pack of pure wool. Once the birds have emptied the first filling, it's ready to go again.

 

"Birds instinctively know what works," says Anne. "You don't have to explain it to them. The first heart I hung up had a bird on it within an hour."

Look what happens when you hang it up. The birds know immediately what it is.

🪡

Hanging

On a branch, fence post or railing — somewhere birds would pass by anyway.

🐦

Birds FIND IT

They pull out the wool themselves. No luring, no acclimation necessary.

🥚

Nests are formed

Softly lined, warm, no plastic. Just as it should be.

where can you buy anne's alpaca heart?

Not at the garden centre. Exclusively via CraftingFolks — the small shop that Anne's daughter Emma set up at Christmas 2025 while Anne was baking cookies next door. "She simply showed me the shop when it was finished."

 

Behind every heart are two people. William in his workshop, his hands rough from the wire. Anne at the kitchen table, handful after handful of wool. He bends it. She fills it. And every time a heart is finished, Anne thinks the same thing: that somewhere out there a bird is waiting for it. That it will arrive in time. That the chicks hatching inside will have a chance.

"this summer is the end. after this, there will be no more nesting hearts."

Anne and William are moving. A smaller house, closer to family in Leeds—the grandchildren are coming, and at some point, you just can't wait any longer. The property in Hawes, the cherry tree, the terrace with the wooden chair—everything is left behind. The alpacas are going to the neighbour's farm. William'S workshop is being packed up. No more bending wire. No more shearing.

 

This batch is the last one ever. Not the last this season. The very last. Knowing this, Emma launched a significant discount campaign for the last remaining hearts —to ensure they all find homes before they're gone forever. Only a few dozen remain.

 

Anne doesn't use many words. But when she talks about the birds, you can hear it in her voice.

"I'm worried. I really am. I see it every morning—they search and search, and what they find is plastic. Threads, bags, string. And I know what that means when the chicks hatch. I can't get it out of my head."

She pauses briefly.

 

"These last hearts—I just want them to hang somewhere. In a garden. On a branch. Somewhere where a bird can find them. That's all I want. For the wool to end up where it belongs—and not in a bin bag."

get your nestingheart now

· Last batch · No more stock 

· Ships within 2 working days

📦 What you get: The alpaca wool heart + refill pack of virgin wool from the last shearing of the Merton's herd.

That's what Anne wanted from the very beginning. No plastic. Real wool. Birds that can nest safely.

here's what customers say:

4.8

Over 7,000 sold — rated exclusively by verified buyers

Janet O.

3 days ago

"I've never experienced anything like this before."

I hung it on the garden fence two weeks ago—and by the third day, a blue tit was coming every morning. I've hung up suet balls for years, but I've never seen anything like this. My granddaughter now wants to watch it every morning before school.

Karen L.

5 days ago

"By the end of the week, someone had started building."

To be honest, I'd never really thought about nesting material before. Since learning about the plastic problem, I check every bird's nest. I hung one in the apple tree—by the end of the week, someone had started building it. It'll stay there all year round now.

Thomas C.

1 week ago

"You can immediately tell that someone didn't just build a product."

I ordered two — one for me, one for my mother. When I told her the story, she burst into tears. You can tell immediately that someone didn't just build a product like that.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I buy it?

Exclusively available at CraftingFolks — Anne's little shop. Not a garden centre. The hearts are handmade and shipped individually.

 

How much longer will it be available?

As long as this batch lasts. Once it's gone, there won't be any more—not next season, not in a year. William has packed up his workshop. This is truly the last of what's left.

 

Is it possible to test it without risk?

Yes. 30-day money-back guarantee, no questions asked. If the birds don't accept it, you get your money back. But honestly, in five years, no one has returned it.

see remaining stock here

Liam R.

2 weeks ago

"The first bird arrived within a day."

I hung it up on Saturday, and by Sunday morning a great tit was already sitting on it, pecking at it. I could hardly believe it. My husband initially thought I was exaggerating—until he saw it himself.

get your nestingheart now

Why more and more bird lovers are hanging a wool heart in their garden instead of feeding stations — and what's behind it.

Natural nesting material in use — breeding birds accept it instinctively.

the modern garden has everything — except what chicks need to survive.

Feeding stations, birdhouses, suet balls – for many garden owners, these have long been standard features. And yet, something crucial is missing: the soft, natural material with which breeding birds line their nests. In modern, manicured gardens, it has almost completely disappeared.

 

The birds search anyway. And they take what they find: strips of plastic bags, synthetic yarn, nylon string.

the first thing a chick feels is the nest. and too often it's plastic.

Experts call it thread entanglement . Synthetic fibres don't give—they retain their shape, even as a chick grows. Thin threads can wrap around a leg, a wing, or a neck. Ornithologists like Dr. Sarah Holloway, formerly of the RSPB, see this every spring at bird sanctuaries in the North: "By the time the problem becomes visible, it's usually too late."

 

Hardly anyone talks about it. Hardly anyone knows about it.

A typical garden nest. Natural fibres are hardly to be found anymore — birds take what they can get.

"We regularly see cases of thread entanglement in bird sanctuaries every spring — young birds with synthetic fibres around their legs or necks, collected by their parent in a neighbour's garden. Natural fibres like alpaca wool give way and decompose. Synthetics do not. That's the whole difference.

Dr. Sarah Holloway

Dr. Sarah Holloway / Ornithologist & bird conservation consultant · Former RSPB field researcher, Yorkshire

for breeding birds, everything begins in the nest.

The nest is no accident—it's the first protection a chick has. The nest is the chick's first environment: what's inside determines the temperature, comfort, and chances of survival in the first few days after hatching. The material determines the nest's quality —soft, natural fibres insulate, adapt, and decompose reliably. Synthetic materials do none of that. And natural materials are becoming increasingly scarce: lawnmowers, pesticides, manicured gardens—what birds found for millennia has almost disappeared.

in hawes, in the yorkshire dales, the solution has been hanging in the cherry tree for five years.

A retired teacher stumbled upon the simplest answer to this problem by chance. Not as an expert, but simply because she observed every morning.

Anne Merton (66) in Hawes, Yorkshire Dales. Thirty years of primary school teaching

the wool that nobody wanted — and the birds that were just waiting for it.

Hawes, Yorkshire Dales, March. Anne Merton has been drinking her morning coffee in the same spot for twenty years—a wooden chair, a covered terrace, a view of the old cherry tree. Her husband, William, has kept their alpaca herd for almost twenty years. Every spring they shear, and every year they harvest a few kilos of soft wool. What isn't used eventually ends up in the compost—or the rubbish.

The first heart William ever bent. Still crooked. Still on the same branch.

When Anne retired in 2019, William bent a small heart out of garden wire as a farewell gift, filled it with a handful of fresh wool, and hung it on the cherry tree. Not as a work of art. Just because.

 

Two weeks later, wrens had stripped it bare.

 

Anne sat with her coffee every morning and watched. Time and time again, she followed the same path to the tree, each time carrying a thread of soft wool back towards the shed roof. When the nest was finished, she could see it from the terrace—a round, silvery-grey dish under the eaves, containing four eggs.

 

All four hatched.

The nest that the wrens built from William's first heart. Soft alpaca wool, no plastic, all four chicks hatched.

"for two years i simply gave them away."

Anne made more hearts. William bent the frames from spare wire, she filled them with the season's wool. One on the fence post by the road. One in the apple tree. One on the corner post of the shed.

Anne fills each heart by hand — using only the softest inner wool, the kind that birds themselves would choose.

Until May, there was more breeding activity in the garden than in all the previous years. Wrens, great tits, and a pair of blue tits that had never nested on the property before.

 

The neighbours noticed it. Then they asked. Then they simply came by.

 

"I never thought about charging money for it," says Anne. "The wool was already there. William could bend the wire. And the birds needed it."

Anne in her garden in Hawes. The herd has been grazing here for almost twenty years. This summer will be the last.

what anne's wool heart can do that no other product can.

The frame's "grasping geometry." The heart-shaped frame isn't decorative—it's functional. The curved inner edge gives birds multiple gripping points from which they can pull out the wool at different angles. A straight basket or box doesn't offer this.

 

The hand-bent 4mm steel frame. William bends each frame individually from 4mm iron wire. No casting, no stamping. Its strength makes it weatherproof and ensures it lasts for years — even if it hangs outside all winter.

 

The "zero-lanolin filling." Sheep's wool contains lanolin—wool grease that birds instinctively avoid. Alpaca wool contains no lanolin. No acclimatisation, no hesitation. Breeding birds accept it from day one.

 

Hand-picked — undercoat, not guard hair. Anne fills only the soft undercoat — the fibres that lie directly against the alpacas' bodies. The coarse outer coat is excluded. The result: exceptionally fine, supple fibres that feel like a feather bed to chicks.

 

The warmth of hollow fibres. Alpaca fibres are hollow at their core—like a tiny thermos. They insulate better than cotton or synthetics of the same weight. In the first days of a chick's life, this makes all the difference.

 

A timeless design with a refill system. The frame won't rust through, it will develop a patina. It will still be hanging next year—and the year after. The heart comes with a refill pack of pure wool. Once the birds have emptied the first filling, it's ready to go again.

 

"Birds instinctively know what works," says Anne. "You don't have to explain it to them. The first heart I hung up had a bird on it within an hour."

Look what happens when you hang it up. The birds know immediately what 

it is.

🪡

Hanging

On a branch, fence post or railing — somewhere birds would pass by anyway.

🐦

Birds FIND IT

They pull out the wool themselves. No luring, no acclimation necessary.

🥚

Nests are formed

Softly lined, warm, no plastic. Just as it should be.

where can you buy anne's alpaca heart?

Not at the garden centre. Exclusively via CraftingFolks — the small shop that Anne's daughter Emma set up at Christmas 2026 while Anne was baking cookies next door. "She simply showed me the shop when it was finished."

 

Behind every heart are two people. William in his workshop, his hands rough from the wire. Anne at the kitchen table, handful after handful of wool. He bends it. She fills it. And every time a heart is finished, Anne thinks the same thing: that somewhere out there a bird is waiting for it. That it will arrive in time. That the chicks hatching inside will have a chance.

"this summer is the end. after this, there will be no more nesting hearts."

Anne and William are moving. A smaller house, closer to family in Leeds—the grandchildren are coming, and at some point, you just can't wait any longer. The property in Hawes, the cherry tree, the terrace with the wooden chair—everything is left behind. The alpacas are going to the neighbour's farm. William'S workshop is being packed up. No more bending wire. No more shearing.

 

This batch is the last one ever. Not the last this season. The very last. Knowing this, Emma launched a significant discount campaign for the last remaining hearts —to ensure they all find homes before they're gone forever. Only a few dozen remain.

 

Anne doesn't use many words. But when she talks about the birds, you can hear it in her voice.

"I'm worried. I really am. I see it every morning—they search and search, and what they find is plastic. Threads, bags, string. And I know what that means when the chicks hatch. I can't get it out of my head."

She pauses briefly.

 

"These last hearts—I just want them to hang somewhere. In a garden. On a branch. Somewhere where a bird can find them. That's all I want. For the wool to end up where it belongs—and not in a bin bag."

get your nestingheart now

Last batch · No more stock · Ships within 2 working days

📦 What you get: The alpaca wool heart + refill pack of virgin wool from the last shearing of the Merton's herd.

That's what Anne wanted from the very beginning. No plastic. Real wool. Birds that can nest safely.

here's what customers say:

4.8

Over 7,000 sold — rated exclusively by verified buyers

Janet O.

✓ Verified

3 days ago

"I've never experienced anything like this before."

I hung it on the garden fence two weeks ago—and by the third day, a blue tit was coming every morning. I've hung up suet balls for years, but I've never seen anything like this. My granddaughter now wants to watch it every morning before school.

Karen L.

✓ Verified

1 week ago

"By the end of the week, someone had started building."

To be honest, I'd never really thought about nesting material before. Since learning about the plastic problem, I check every bird's nest. I hung one in the apple tree—by the end of the week, someone had started building it. It'll stay there all year round now.

Thomas C.

✓ Verified

2 weeks ago

"You can immediately tell that someone didn't just build a product."

I ordered two — one for me, one for my mother. When I told her the story, she burst into tears. You can tell immediately that someone didn't just build a product like that.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I buy it?

Exclusively available at CraftingFolks — Anne's little shop. Not a garden centre. The hearts are handmade and shipped individually.

 

How much longer will it be available?

As long as this batch lasts. Once it's gone, there won't be any more—not next season, not in a year. William has packed up his workshop. This is truly the last of what's left.

 

Is it possible to test it without risk?

Yes. 30-day money-back guarantee, no questions asked. If the birds don't accept it, you get your money back. But honestly, in five years, no one has returned it.

see remaining stock here

Liam R.

✓ Verified

4 days ago

"The first bird arrived within a day."

I hung it up on Saturday, and by Sunday morning a great tit was already sitting on it, pecking at it. I could hardly believe it. My husband initially thought I was exaggerating—until he saw it himself.

get your nestingheart now

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Advertising Disclosure / Advertorial

This article is a paid advertisement (advertorial). The author has a financial relationship with the brand featured in this content. "This article is a paid advertisement. CraftingFolks has a commercial relationship with the publisher. Product available while stocks last." 
Individual results may vary. We are not responsible for the accuracy of any third-party content.

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