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Frog & Toad Houses

Frogs and toads are fascinating amphibians and highly beneficial for our gardens. Adding a frog and toad house in a secluded spot by your pond is one of the simplest ways to attract insect-eating frogs to your outside space. Frogs eat all manner of mosquitoes, snails, flies and other garden pests, so there is less need to use artificial pesticides.

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Frog and Toad Bunker
Frog And Toad Bunker
£18.95
Eco Frogilo Habitat
Eco Frogilo Frog House
£25.95
Tadpole Food for Ponds
Tadpole Food
£6.95
Tadpole Food - when they grow legs
Late Stage Tadpole Food
£6.95

There are two types of native frog in the UK - the common frog and the pool frog. In recent years, their species have seen a real decline in numbers, due to habitat loss, pollution and disease. You can play a vital role in helping them thrive in your garden. As well as needing a pond to breed, they will need somewhere to hide from predators. 

Choose our frog houses to give your frogs shelter

In the wild, frogs live in a variety of damp habitats, including stone and wood piles and grasslands. Our Eco Frogilo Frog House provides a summer or winter home for frogs and toads and a safe space away from predators. British made using 100% recyclable NPLAS with a green decorative tagine-style roof , it will make an ornamental garden feature in its own right. 

We also offer a Frog and Toad Bunker, made from durable woodstone. Providing a cool space in summer and warm retreat in winter, this product is ideal for frogs, toads and newts of all descriptions. 

Situate your frog and toad house in a quiet and shaded area, ideally near a pond. If your frogs lay frogspawn, only a fraction of this will survive into adulthood. Give tadpoles our Early Stage Tadpole Food and Later Stage Tadpole Food to help them mature and complete the life cycle. Read our blog about the lure of the pond.

What do frogs eat in a pond?

Small frogs have a menu that includes flies, moths, worms, snails, slugs and various other insects and invertebrates.

Initially, tadpoles eat pond algae before becoming meat-eaters. As well as small insects and plants, tadpoles might also eat other tadpoles.

You don’t need to feed frogs as they’ll generally only stay where there’s sufficient food. However, you can help them out by letting a part of your garden grow wild. This will attract the insects that frogs feed on.

You can help by giving tadpoles our Early Stage Tadpole Food and Later Stage Tadpole Food to help them mature and complete the life cycle. Read our blog about the lure of the pond.

What do newts eat in a pond?

Much like frogs, newts in ponds will eat small insects, snails and slugs, as well as caterpillars. They might also eat tadpoles or frogs if they find any close by, which means you’ll have fewer frogs if you have newts in your pond. But it could also just be that your pond is more suitable for either newts or frogs.

We can help, talk to us

If you are looking for ways to help your pond life and local frogs and toads prosper, we are here to help. If you want to know more about our products or ask our advice, give us a call on freephone: 0800 085 4865.