with an umbrella
sett
Badgers, wild dogs, and sha. They are from North Africa.
A badger's sett is made of a network of underground tunnels and chambers that the badgers excavate in the soil. The walls are typically reinforced with soil and may include bedding materials such as grass, leaves, and other vegetation for comfort. Badgers often create multiple entrances to their sett for easy access and to evade predators. The sett serves as a den for rearing young and provides shelter from harsh weather.
A sett or set.
I'm fairly sure it's called a burrow for rabbits, and a sett for badgers.
yes they do
badger's nests are called sett.
A badger lives in a sett. A sett is a complex network of underground tunnels and chambers where badgers sleep, raise their young, and store food. The term "holt" typically refers to a den or shelter used by animals like otters, rather than badgers.
A badgers staple diet is earthworms, when the weather conditions are mild and damp, badgers will head for areas where they know to find worms on the surface.
Its a Badgers Cete and a Foxes Den an alternative answer is that at Badger lives in a 'sett' and a fox's home is an 'earth'
A Badger's hole is called a sett. Several holes with large spoil heaps and obvious paths emanating from and between sett entrances.
Badgers live in a sett, which is an underground burrow system that they dig to live in. Setts have separate sleeping chambers, nesting areas, and multiple entrances.