




Seedball Wildflower Bag - Wildlife
Supporting wildlife is easy with these pollinator-friendly seedballs
A bag of Wildlife Mix seed balls, ideal for creating larger wildflower patches. Each bag contains 100 seed balls.
A carefully selected mix designed specifically to support garden wildlife, including bees, butterflies, birds, beetles, hedgehogs and bats – wildflowers are brilliant habitats for garden biodiversity, providing and attracting food while also offering shelter. Includes Common Poppy, Wild Carrot, Corn Marigold, Red Clover Greater Knapweed, Sheep Sorrel, Yellow Rattle, Birdsfoot Trefoil, Tufted Vetch and Self Heal.
Seedball bulk bags are made from paper, they’re totally plastic free and ideal for composting at home. As well as for use in your own garden, they make for lovely gardening gifts, bee and butterfly gifts or eco-friendly gifts. They will work well in all growing spaces – window boxes, balcony pots, garden beds and wildlife gardens. It’s time to rewild!
Please note: this product is not a toy and must be used with adult supervision.
These seeds are not able to be exported outside the UK.

HELPING THE UK
The UK is currently one of the most nature-depleted countries on the planet. When you shop with WWF, you’re joining a national movement to nurture and replenish the UK’s land, rivers, seascapes and wildlife.
PROTECTING UK WILDLIFE
From puffins to bluebells, bumblebees to mountain hares, UK wildlife is feeling the heat from climate change and struggling to adapt. Our 2024 manifesto highlights that a quarter of UK mammals, including red squirrels, hedgehogs and wildcats, are now at risk of extinction. Together, we can ensure that we support our climate, nature and food security whenever we use our land and seas. By applying pressure on government and decision makers, we believe we can rewire our economy to be nature and climate-positive, by changing how we heat our homes, our travel and the way we grow and buy our food.

Wild Ingleborough
WWF is working on a visionary landscape-scale restoration project known as Wild Ingleborough, hoping to return an iconic area in the Yorkshire Dales to its former glory. So far, an incredible 65,000 trees have been planted, building a better future for the UK’s uplands and species that live there.