European hedgehog, France
Spring arrives with a small, spiky ambassador: the European hedgehog, spotted here in France. Part cuddle, part survival gear, this tiny forager is mostly nocturnal and usually solitary, guided mainly by smell and sound. Its job description is simple: roam, sniff through leaf litter and vacuum up invertebrates like worms, beetles, slugs and caterpillars—the kind of snacks that keep ecosystems running and gardeners smiling. When danger shows up, it doesn't negotiate or flee. It curls into a tight ball and lets its spines do the talking.
Across colder regions, many hedgehogs hibernate through winter, reemerging as the earth hums with new life. Although these night-wanderers face real pressures in parts of Europe, especially from roads and habitat fragmentation, scenes like this are the hopeful bit. As long as forests stay connected and a little wild, spring will keep doing what it does best: rebooting the woods, one small prickly life at a time.