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Section: Nature & Garden

Section: Nature & Crafts

"Last summer I barely saw a single brimstone butterfly." — Why a 71-year-old carpenter's wife from the Yorkshire Dales is now selling her last butterfly houses at a special price before the workshop closes.

Margaret "Peggy" Holt (71) in her workshop in Hawes, Yorkshire Dales. After almost thirty years, she is letting go of her last butterfly houses.

In a small workshop behind a stone farmhouse in Wensleydale, Margaret "Peggy" Holt has been building butterfly houses from natural wood for thirty years — not decorations, but real habitats for creatures that have almost disappeared from British gardens. Now the 71-year-old is selling the last of them.

 

Hawes, March. The workshop smells of wood shavings and linseed oil. Teardrop-shaped wooden houses hang on a homemade shelf—some still unfinished, others finished, with fine slits in the front and a small bowl at the bottom. Peggy walks slowly along the row and touches one of them. "This is one of the last," she says quietly. "After this, it's really over."

 

"I'm 71," she says. "We're selling the farmhouse. Our daughter Hannah is expecting her first child in Leeds — and an hour away is an hour too many when you want to be there as a grandmother.” She runs her hand over the wood grain of a finished house. There's no room for the workshop in a Leeds terrace. No new houses will follow. She’s now selling what she’s already finished building.

every winter she went into the workshop — because the butterflies couldn't wait for her.

Peggy's late husband Tom was a joiner — proper old-school joinery, dovetail joints and mortise-and-tenon, nothing from a flatpack. The workshop attached to their stone farmhouse in Wensleydale was his domain — cluttered, smelling of wood shavings and linseed oil. He showed Peggy how to work with wood in their first winter together. Since then, the workshop has been hers too.

 

The first butterfly house she built hung crooked. The second was better. By the third, she knew what she was doing. Tom had sketched the teardrop shape on a scrap of brown paper one evening — his trademark. Aerodynamic, he explained. "Hangs calmly in the wind, no swaying, no stress on the suspension. Lasts for decades." Peggy hasn't built any other shape since.

 

Every winter, when the garden is dormant and the dales are grey, Peggy goes to her workshop. Not because she has to—but because it gives her something she can't find anywhere else.

The teardrop form — aerodynamic, stable in the wind, lasts for decades.

secure your houses today

why most butterfly house remain empty — and what peggy has learned in thirty years

Peggy gets straight to the point when you ask her about it. "People buy a house, hang it up — and then nothing happens. Not a single visitor. And they think butterflies just don't appear in their house. But it's almost always the house that's the problem."

 

Incorrect slot width. Too wide, and birds will fly straight in—the biggest mistake. Too narrow, and butterflies won't find an entrance at all. The correct width is less than one centimetre. This is rarely adhered to in mass-produced goods because it makes manufacturing more complex.

 

No puddler. That's the detail most people overlook. Butterflies don't drink from open dishes—they absorb minerals from moist, sandy substrate. A butterfly house without a puddler is like a birdhouse without water. It looks like a home, but it isn't.

 

Painted or treated wood. Smells of chemicals. Butterflies are sensitive to foreign smells—it's their survival mechanism. Many inexpensive houses are treated with varnish or wood preservative to make them look good in shops. In the garden, they remain empty.

 

Decorative form without function. "I see these painted wooden houses from the garden centre," says Peggy. "Nice to look at. But inside there's nothing—no structure, no depth, no protection. A butterfly needs narrow, dark hiding places. Not an open cavity that every wind blows through."

 

Cheap materials that fail after one season. Particleboard swells, plywood peels, thin panels warp. A butterfly house made of poor-quality materials becomes hazardous waste after two winters. Peggy's houses are made of untreated solid wood—robust, weather-resistant, and only more beautiful with age.

"People mean well. But a house that remains empty helps no one — neither the buyer nor the butterfly."

First they hesitate — then they come closer. That's what happens when a house is truly inviting.

why butterflies are disappearing — and what a single garden can do about it

What Peggy observed in her notebook is not an isolated incident. The figures are alarmingly clear.

butterflies in britain — the situation

80%

of UK butterfly species have declined since the 1970s — one of the steepest drops of any insect group

17

of 59 UK butterfly species are now on the conservation Red List — at serious risk of extinction

41%

decline in UK butterfly abundance over the past two decades, even in protected nature reserves

1 in 10

gardens provide meaningful habitat for butterflies — despite most gardeners believing theirs does

(Sources: Butterfly Conservation; UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology; State of the UK's Butterflies Report 2022.)

The peacock. The red admiral. The comma. The small tortoiseshell — that scrap of burnt orange that used to cluster on every buddleia from July onwards. These are the butterflies of British childhoods — and they are vanishing from the places people know best. In the wild they find shelter in hedges, under bark, in deadwood. In the typical British garden — none of that.

"Every garden, every terrace, every balcony with a real butterfly house is a small piece of nature reclaimed. That sounds grand — but it starts with a single house."

The right house is crucial . One without well-planned trenches, without puddles, without weatherproof materials remains empty—it looks like a home, but it isn't one. Peggy knows this. She's watched for thirty years.

the end of an era – and a last chance

At the end of spring, Peggy packs her last box. "I have no successor. Nobody wants to learn this craft any more — it takes years to truly understand what a butterfly house needs." On the workshop shelf are the last completed houses. Her life's work. The last collection that ever passed through her hands.

 

To ensure they go to good homes before summer, she has decided to take an unusual step: a significant discount on all the houses. "It's no longer about the money for me. I want the houses to end up in gardens where they will truly be appreciated," says Peggy.

 

Her granddaughter Rachel set up the shop spontaneously, during a weekend visit. "Gran, other people need to have these," she said. Rachel handles the online side. Peggy packs every box herself and writes to every buyer by hand.

What's on the workshop shelf is all that's left — no restock is coming.

what a butterfly house really needs to be able to do:

Thoughtfully designed slot width: wide enough for butterflies and moths — narrow enough to keep predators out. Not decorative, but functional.

Integrated puddler: Butterflies need minerals from moist soil—without this feature, hardly any will move in. Peggy knows this because she has observed them for years.

Teardrop shape, crafted according to master carpenter principles: Hangs calmly in the wind, no swaying, no stress on the suspension. Lasts for decades.

Untreated natural wood: Robust, weather-resistant, no varnish, no plastic. Nothing that smells or repels animals.

Easy to clean: Back opens without tools — for inspection and maintenance between seasons.

A true habitat, not just decoration: Developed over decades of observation — not for a catalogue, but for animals that will actually live there. Works particularly well in cities and towns where natural retreats are lacking.

Limited: Only a few pieces left from Peggy's latest collection — once they're gone, there won't be any more.

The puddler on the ground — the detail that makes the difference.

see remaining houses left →

they hung it up — and then something came back.

Karen P.

April 17, 2026

Verified Customer

"Put it up in the garden on a Wednesday. By the following Sunday I'd had a red admiral and two commas using the puddler tray. I've had a butterfly house from a garden centre for three years — not once did I see a single butterfly use it. The difference is night and day."

33

Jodie C.

April 19, 2026

Verified Customer

"Bought one for my mother for her birthday — she's 74 and has kept a wildlife garden in Shropshire for forty years. She rang me the morning it arrived. Said it was the most thoughtful thing anyone had given her in years. She's already ordered a second one for by the greenhouse."

12

Mark T.

April 24, 2026

Verified Customer

"The craftsmanship is genuinely exceptional — you can see immediately this was made by hand, by someone who knows wood. One of the slot edges has a tiny variation in the grain that gives it real character. The puddler tray was an unexpected detail I hadn't noticed from the photos. That's the thing that convinced me it was designed by someone who actually watches butterflies."

9

Sitting, resting, drinking — a butterfly house that is actually inhabited.

where peggy's last houses still exist

Peggy's butterfly houses are available exclusively through CraftingFolks — the small online shop her granddaughter Rachel set up. You won't find them in any garden centre. Similar-looking houses exist online, but they have nothing to do with Peggy's thirty years of field observation and careful design.

only this spring left – then it's over.

Peggy plans to send her last box by early summer at the latest. "By then, I want to have all the houses in good hands. After that, it's really over," she says quietly. She smiles. "Almost thirty years. It's been a wonderful time."

 

This is the last chance to bring a piece of genuine craftsmanship into your own garden — before Peggy's butterfly houses are gone for good.

Peggy writes to every buyer by hand. Not as an obligation — but as a habit.

100% Money-Back Guarantee

Hang it in your garden. Fill the puddler. Watch what comes. If you're not convinced — by the quality, the craft, or the results — return it for a full refund. No questions. Peggy has spent thirty years giving these away to people she trusted. The guarantee reflects that.

get your butterflyhouse now

"Last summer I barely saw a single brimstone butterfly." — Why a 71-year-old carpenter's wife from the Yorkshire Dales is now selling her last butterfly houses at a special price before the workshop closes.

Margaret "Peggy" Holt (71) in her workshop in Hawes, Yorkshire Dales. After almost thirty years, she is letting go of her last butterfly houses.

In a small workshop behind a stone farmhouse in Wensleydale, Margaret "Peggy" Holt has been building butterfly houses from natural wood for thirty years — not decorations, but real habitats for creatures that have almost disappeared from British gardens. Now the 71-year-old is selling the last of them.

 

Hawes, March. The workshop smells of wood shavings and linseed oil. Teardrop-shaped wooden houses hang on a homemade shelf—some still unfinished, others finished, with fine slits in the front and a small bowl at the bottom. Peggy walks slowly along the row and touches one of them. "This is one of the last," she says quietly. "After this, it's really over."

 

"I'm 71," she says. "We're selling the farmhouse. Our daughter Hannah is expecting her first child in Leeds — and an hour away is an hour too many when you want to be there as a grandmother.” She runs her hand over the wood grain of a finished house. There's no room for the workshop in a Leeds terrace. No new houses will follow. She’s now selling what she’s already finished building.

every winter she went into the workshop — because the butterflies couldn't wait for her.

Peggy's late husband Tom was a joiner — proper old-school joinery, dovetail joints and mortise-and-tenon, nothing from a flatpack. The workshop attached to their stone farmhouse in Wensleydale was his domain — cluttered, smelling of wood shavings and linseed oil. He showed Peggy how to work with wood in their first winter together. Since then, the workshop has been hers too.

 

The first butterfly house she built hung crooked. The second was better. By the third, she knew what she was doing. Tom had sketched the teardrop shape on a scrap of brown paper one evening — his trademark. Aerodynamic, he explained. "Hangs calmly in the wind, no swaying, no stress on the suspension. Lasts for decades." Peggy hasn't built any other shape since.

 

Every winter, when the garden is dormant and the dales are grey, Peggy goes to her workshop. Not because she has to—but because it gives her something she can't find anywhere else.

The teardrop form — aerodynamic, stable in the wind, lasts for decades.

secure your houses today

why most butterfly house remain empty — and what peggy has learned in thirty years

Peggy gets straight to the point when you ask her about it. "People buy a house, hang it up — and then nothing happens. Not a single visitor. And they think butterflies just don't appear in their house. But it's almost always the house that's the problem."

 

Incorrect slot width. Too wide, and birds will fly straight in—the biggest mistake. Too narrow, and butterflies won't find an entrance at all. The correct width is less than one centimetre. This is rarely adhered to in mass-produced goods because it makes manufacturing more complex.

 

No puddler. That's the detail most people overlook. Butterflies don't drink from open dishes—they absorb minerals from moist, sandy substrate. A butterfly house without a puddler is like a birdhouse without water. It looks like a home, but it isn't.

 

Painted or treated wood. Smells of chemicals. Butterflies are sensitive to foreign smells—it's their survival mechanism. Many inexpensive houses are treated with varnish or wood preservative to make them look good in shops. In the garden, they remain empty.

 

Decorative form without function. "I see these painted wooden houses from the garden centre," says Peggy. "Nice to look at. But inside there's nothing—no structure, no depth, no protection. A butterfly needs narrow, dark hiding places. Not an open cavity that every wind blows through."

 

Cheap materials that fail after one season. Particleboard swells, plywood peels, thin panels warp. A butterfly house made of poor-quality materials becomes hazardous waste after two winters. Peggy's houses are made of untreated solid wood—robust, weather-resistant, and only more beautiful with age.

"People mean well. But a house that remains empty helps no one — neither the buyer nor the butterfly."

First they hesitate — then they come closer. That's what happens when a house is truly inviting.

why butterflies are disappearing — and what a single garden can do about it

What Peggy observed in her notebook is not an isolated incident. The figures are alarmingly clear.

butterflies in britain — the situation

80%

of UK butterfly species have declined since the 1970s — one of the steepest drops of any insect group

17

of 59 UK butterfly species are now on the conservation Red List — at serious risk of extinction

41%

decline in UK butterfly abundance over the past two decades, even in protected nature reserves

1 in 10

gardens provide meaningful habitat for butterflies — despite most gardeners believing theirs does

(Sources: Butterfly Conservation; UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology; State of the UK's Butterflies Report 2022.)

The peacock. The red admiral. The comma. The small tortoiseshell — that scrap of burnt orange that used to cluster on every buddleia from July onwards. These are the butterflies of British childhoods — and they are vanishing from the places people know best. In the wild they find shelter in hedges, under bark, in deadwood. In the typical British garden — none of that.

"Every garden, every terrace, every balcony with a real butterfly house is a small piece of nature reclaimed. That sounds grand — but it starts with a single house."

The right house is crucial . One without well-planned trenches, without puddles, without weatherproof materials remains empty—it looks like a home, but it isn't one. Peggy knows this. She's watched for thirty years.

the end of an era – and a last chance

At the end of spring, Peggy packs her last box. "I have no successor. Nobody wants to learn this craft any more — it takes years to truly understand what a butterfly house needs." On the workshop shelf are the last completed houses. Her life's work. The last collection that ever passed through her hands.

 

To ensure they go to good homes before summer, she has decided to take an unusual step: a significant discount on all the houses. "It's no longer about the money for me. I want the houses to end up in gardens where they will truly be appreciated," says Peggy.

 

Her granddaughter Rachel set up the shop spontaneously, during a weekend visit. "Gran, other people need to have these," she said. Rachel handles the online side. Peggy packs every box herself and writes to every buyer by hand.

What's on the workshop shelf is all that's left — no restock is coming.

what a butterfly house really needs to be able to do:

Thoughtfully designed slot width: wide enough for butterflies and moths — narrow enough to keep predators out. Not decorative, but functional.

Integrated puddler: Butterflies need minerals from moist soil—without this feature, hardly any will move in. Peggy knows this because she has observed them for years.

Teardrop shape, crafted according to master carpenter principles: Hangs calmly in the wind, no swaying, no stress on the suspension. Lasts for decades.

Untreated natural wood: Robust, weather-resistant, no varnish, no plastic. Nothing that smells or repels animals.

Easy to clean: Back opens without tools — for inspection and maintenance between seasons.

A true habitat, not just decoration: Developed over decades of observation — not for a catalogue, but for animals that will actually live there. Works particularly well in cities and towns where natural retreats are lacking.

Limited: Only a few pieces left from Peggy's latest collection — once they're gone, there won't be any more.

The puddler on the ground — the detail that makes the difference.

see remaining houses left →

they hung it up — and then something came back.

Karen P.

April 17, 2026

Verified Customer

"Put it up in the garden on a Wednesday. By the following Sunday I'd had a red admiral and two commas using the puddler tray. I've had a butterfly house from a garden centre for three years — not once did I see a single butterfly use it. The difference is night and day."

33

Jodie C.

April 19, 2026

Verified Customer

"Bought one for my mother for her birthday — she's 74 and has kept a wildlife garden in Shropshire for forty years. She rang me the morning it arrived. Said it was the most thoughtful thing anyone had given her in years. She's already ordered a second one for by the greenhouse."

12

Mark T.

April 24, 2026

Verified Customer

"The craftsmanship is genuinely exceptional — you can see immediately this was made by hand, by someone who knows wood. One of the slot edges has a tiny variation in the grain that gives it real character. The puddler tray was an unexpected detail I hadn't noticed from the photos. That's the thing that convinced me it was designed by someone who actually watches butterflies."

9

Sitting, resting, drinking — a butterfly house that is actually inhabited.

where peggy's last houses still exist

Peggy's butterfly houses are available exclusively through CraftingFolks — the small online shop her granddaughter Rachel set up. You won't find them in any garden centre. Similar-looking houses exist online, but they have nothing to do with Peggy's thirty years of field observation and careful design.

only this spring left – then it's over.

Peggy plans to send her last box by early summer at the latest. "By then, I want to have all the houses in good hands. After that, it's really over," she says quietly. She smiles. "Almost thirty years. It's been a wonderful time."

 

This is the last chance to bring a piece of genuine craftsmanship into your own garden — before Peggy's butterfly houses are gone for good.

Peggy writes to every buyer by hand. Not as an obligation — but as a habit.

100% Money-Back Guarantee

Hang it in your garden. Fill the puddler. Watch what comes. If you're not convinced — by the quality, the craft, or the results — return it for a full refund. No questions. Peggy has spent thirty years giving these away to people she trusted. The guarantee reflects that.

get your butterflyhouse now

Ⓒ 2026 ItamiHome

THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT AND NOT AN ACTUAL NEWS ARTICLE, BLOG, OR CONSUMER PROTECTION UPDATE

ADVERTISING DISCLOSURE: This website and the products & services referred to on the site are advertising marketplaces. This website is an advertisement and not a news publication. Any photographs of persons used on this site are models. The owner of this site and of the products and services referred to on this site only provides a service where consumers can obtain and compare

THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT AND NOT AN ACTUAL NEWS ARTICLE, BLOG, OR CONSUMER PROTECTION UPDATE

ADVERTISING DISCLOSURE: This website and the products & services referred to on the site are advertising marketplaces. This website is an advertisement and not a news publication. Any photographs of persons used on this site are models. The owner of this site and of the products and services referred to on this site only provides a service where consumers can obtain and compare

THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT AND NOT AN ACTUAL NEWS ARTICLE, BLOG, OR CONSUMER PROTECTION UPDATE

ADVERTISING DISCLOSURE: This website and the products & services referred to on the site are advertising marketplaces. This website is an advertisement and not a news publication. Any photographs of persons used on this site are models. The owner of this site and of the products and services referred to on this site only provides a service where consumers can obtain and compare

 

IMAGE DISCLOSURE: Some images on this page have been generated or enhanced using AI tools. Photographs may include AI-assisted visual elements created to illustrate the story..