Monday, 13 April 2026

Birdfood merchants react with dismay to RSPB's advice to 'pause' feeding garden birds during breeding season


RSPB is urging birdlovers to cease feeding birds such as this Goldfinch with sunflower hearts and other seeds between May and October 


BIRDFOOD companies have not taken well to the RSPB's call for people to halt filling garden feeders with seeds or peanuts during summer.

Lincolnshire-based Vine House Farm said: "We are disappointed with the RSPB’s announcement on supplementary garden bird feeding."

The latest advice of the charity - reinforced by its chief executive, Beccy Speight,  in an interview on on BBC Radio 4 -  was that filling feeders should be "paused" between May 1 and October 31 so as to reduce the chances of diseases spreading, especially among seedeaters such as Greenfinches.

The team at Vine House Farm acknowledge that spread of disease is a risk if feeders are dirty, or if uneaten food is allowed to deteriorate, but they insist  that, so long as hygiene is observed, their customers should continue during the breeding season.

Says their statement: "We have carried out extensive studies at Vine House Farm over many decades on the benefits of supplementary feeding during the breeding season, especially for Tree Sparrows. 

"These studies  have unequivocally demonstrated the benefits of supplementary feeding on breeding populations due to the huge decline in natural invertebrate and natural seed food sources because of climate change, intensive farming and urbanisation.

"We believe that stopping supplementary feeding during the breeding season would have a negative impact on the breeding success of many species which are already in decline." 

The statement continues: "A further issue which concerns us is the negative impact on the mental health of people whose lives are enriched by feeding garden birds. 

"Many of these people are relatively elderly, with garden birds often becoming a major focus of their day-to-day lives.

"It is also the case that retired people will typically have the time each day to ensure best practice such as keeping feeders clean which is surely a much better option than asking them to take the feeders down."

Similar sentiments have been sounded by Haith's, another Lincolnshire based birdfood merchant, which insists: "You do not need to stop feeding birds - you need to keep doing it properly.

"Across the UK, millions of gardens form a connected network for wildlife. 

"In a countryside under pressure from habitat loss and environmental change, these spaces help birds find food, shelter and stability. 

"That is not a small thing - its is one of the most powerful forces for nature we have."  

Whisper it quietly but are grouse moor gamekeepers now the 'guardian angels' of Britain's breeding Curlews?

                                                      

Adults Curlew - eggs and chicks all too regularly fall victim to predators

GAMEKEEPERS take immense flak for their activities on the great landholdings of Yorkshire, Scotland and elsewhere - particularly  when it comes to safeguarding the eggs and chicks of 'game birds' such as grouse  from predators.

Of particular controversy is the  illegal  killing - alleged  to be widespread and sometimes persistent - of protected raptors such as Hen Harriers, Golden Eagle and Red Kites.

But when it comes to the culling  of Carrion Crows and mammals such as foxes and stoats, the issue becomes more nuanced because these are creatures that prey not just on grouse and pheasants but also on other moorland-nesting species such as Curlews and Golden Plovers.

The spotlight fell on predator control at last month's parliamentary briefing on the Curlew Action Plan where one of the keynote speakers was former RSPB chairman and uplands birds expert Prof Ian Newton.

"We have to grasp the 'inconvenient truth' about predation," he declared. 

"In my view, grouse moors have been greatly underrated in their crucial importance, not just for grouse, but for all ground-nesting birds. 

"This is due both to their habitat management and to predation control. 

"You may be surprised to learn that some single grouse moors with their neighbouring fields in northern England now hold more Curlew than the whole of Ireland."

Prof Newton: 'Predator control will need government support if it is to be effective'

Prof Newton noted that as recently as in the 1980s, Curlew were widespread, "breeding abundantly in every county", and he attributed their decline not to loss of habitat or lack of food but to predation on eggs and chicks.

He continued: "Clearly, there are factors operating in modern Britain that have enabled certain predators, notably foxes and badgers, to increase far beyond previous levels, and achieve much higher densities than in any other European country for which we have information. 

"Unless we can resolve the predation problem, we face the likelihood that most ground-nesting species will disappear in the coming years from most of Britain, surviving perhaps in game-rearing areas and offshore islands lacking the relevant mammalian predators. "

He concluded: "For restoring Curlew and other ground-nesting birds, we know what should be done, but it needs coordinated efforts by all relevant stakeholders at national level.  

"Predator control will need government support if it is to be effective across landscapes." 

                                             





 

Sunday, 12 April 2026

Still as chirpy as ever - House Sparrow again comes out tops in RSPB's 2026 Garden Birdwatch survey

 

THE House Sparrow remains the most populous bird in  British gardens according to research collated by the RSPB from its  Garden Birdwatch held in January this year.

It was seen in more than 1.27-million individuals counted  - well ahead of the Blue Tit which was runner-up with a tally of just over 1.11-million.

The others in the Top Ten are as denoted above.

The rest of the Top Twenty was as follows:

11 Jackdaw
12 Feral Pigeon
13 Chaffinch
14 Coal Tit
15  Collared Dove
16  Dunnock
17 Carrion Crow
18  Greenfinch
19  Wren
20 Great Spotted Woodpecker

More than 650,000 counters took part in the annual survey, with  9,473,932 birds counted.

Cabinet minister pledges £1-million Whitehall funds to support breeding return of Golden Eagles to England

                                        

On the hunt for something to eat - Golden Eagle (photo: Forestry England)


COULD the  Golden Eagle be poised to make a breeding return to England after an absence of more than 150 years?

Once widespread across England and mentioned more than 40 times by Shakespeare, the species was decimated to breeding extinction by persecution, especially during the Victorian era. 

The last resident Golden Eagle died in the Lake District in 2016. 

But a study published by Forestry England confirms that England has the capacity to sustain Golden Eagle populations.

The following eight locations have been identified as 'Potential Recovery Zones':

* The Cheviots
* North Pennines
* South Pennines
* Lake District
* Yorkshire Dales
* North Yorkshire Moors
* Forest of Bowland
* South-west of England

The Environment Secretary, Emma Reynolds, has  approved £1-million  Defra funding to explore a reintroduction programme with the potential for juveniles, six to eight weeks old, to be released as early as next year.

It is not yet known where the juveniles might be sourced.
 
Says Ms Reynolds: "This government is committed to protecting and restoring our most threatened native wildlife - and that includes bringing back iconic species like the Golden Eagle.

"We will work alongside partners, including Forestry England and Restoring Upland Nature,  to make the Golden Eagle a feature of English landscapes once again." 

Not everyone will necessarily welcome the reintroduction proposal, with some estates managers, gamekeepers and farmers likely to fearful that such a large predator could put their own livestock and sporting interests in jeopardy.  

Last word to Forestry England which states: "Over the next few years, we will work with project partners to:

* Carry out stakeholder mapping to identify people to engage with, listen to and build trust with, leading to detailed consultation with landowners, land managers, farmers, raptor working groups, game keepers, community groups, and conservation organisations.

* Look at local habitat, potential nesting sites and natural prey availability.

* Learn more about how people feel about the possible return of Golden Eagles.

* Share information openly and regularly.

"If the project moves forward, any release of young eagles would only happen once studies and consultation are complete, and if there is strong support from local communities."

Anyone wishing to comment on the proposal is invited to do so by sending an email to:  goldeneagleproject@forestryengland.uk
                                     
Does the species have breeding future in England? (photo: Forestry England)

Saturday, 11 April 2026

Bring on the Choughs! Actors Sam West and Ade Edmondson to star in three-part TV birding series

                                                      


It's destination Cornwall in search of Choughs for the first in three episodes of Sam & Ade Go Birding to be screened on 5 TV at 8pm on Tuesday April 14. Sam West (left), who has been a birder for 20 years, looks forward to showing fellow-actor Adrian Edmondson, a newcomer to birding, the Choughs, plus various wader species and  rare American vagrants in the sweeping coastal landscape habitats in the  west of the county. Over the three shows, which also take in Norfolk and Somerset, the duo also indulge in candid and often amusing conversations which touch on the nature of the birding obsession, acting, ageing and childhood loss. Oh yes, and they also visit a pub or two. 

Crevice created by eroded canal stonework not quite right as potential nesting site for returning Sand Martins



Suitable nesting sides are often hard to find for returning Sand Martins, so fingers crossed in their quest for three birds that, earlier this week, were prospecting a wall of the Caledonian canal near Fort William in northern Scotland. One bird briefly tried out a crevice for size and comfort, but it did not  seem right, so the martins moved on.

                                         

                                                                      

                                            


Saturday, 4 April 2026

Bygone birding: slaughter of Common Scoters was once Christmas shooting ritual in southern France

                                           

Portrait of Common Scoters in Arctic waters in Gould's Birds of Europe


News that the RSPB is seeking to appoint a Common Scoter Manager has prompted a reminder of what John Gould wrote about this marine duck species in the mid-19th Century:

It will not be necessary for my readers to be told that our earth is encircled by zones termed the frigid, the temperate and the torrid.

 Every schoolboy knows the principal features of the poles, but perhaps there are persons who are not aware that, although the conditions of the Arctic and Antarctic circles are much alike, the birdlife of these opposite ends of the globe is very dissimilar.

Guillemots, Puffins, divers and ducks of numerous species, inhabit the northern, while penguins, albatrosses and petrels, but no ducks, or scarcely any, inhabit the ice-bound lands of the south. 

The bird whose history I am about to give pertains to the north, and belongs to one of the peculiar types of ducks above alluded to - commonly termed scoters, are strictly denizens of the icy regions.

 They are strikingly different in colour, and somewhat in structure, from every other form in the great family of ducks. 

That nature’s general laws are sometimes infringed is evident from the peculiar coloration of the birds of this genus which does not, as is generally the case, assimilate in any way with the objects surrounding them.

What can form a greater contrast than their jetty-black colour with either the masses of snow and floating ice-mountains of the part of the ocean they inhabit or, the borders of the inland rivers and lakes, or the tussocky parts of the marshes upon which they breed? 

The black colouring of the scoters is most distinctive and, in the present species, the Common Scoter,  there is no indication whatever of a white mark on any part of its plumage.

When the rigours of winter induce the Common Scoter to leave the north and seek the more temperate latitudes and seas surrounding the British Islands and those which wash the shores of Holland, France, and Spain, it may be seen in flocks of many hundreds.

In the winter season, we can scarcely take a trip from Dover to Calais or from Folkestone to Boulogne without the vessel steaming through little knots of the Scoter, while, from the deck, strings of 40 or more may frequently he seen passing to and fro between one part of their feeding-grounds and another.

When a solitary individual leaves the seas for our inland waters or ascends the Thames and other rivers far above the tideway, we may be sure that it is incited to do so by some unwonted cause, perhaps from sickness or an internal injury.

This remark, however, does not apply to the small companies which are said, now and then, to visit the great lakes of Cumberland and Westmoreland.

Saline lakes are more in unison with their habits and mode of life than fresh waters, for molluscs, shrimps and other crustaceans are as plentiful on their sandy bottoms as on the bed of the sea. 

Being supposed to partake of the nature of fish, Common Scoters are eaten in France and Spain during Lent and on fast-days. 

A French account of the mode in which many of these birds are obtained upon the various salt lakes in the vicinity of Martigues, at the mouth of the Rhone, reveals that these numerous salt lakes are frequented in winter by large flocks of aquatic birds. 

With the first appearance of frost, the Common Scoters and other ducks arrive in numerous small flocks, and a destructive sort of battle takes place in which all who can are induced to participate with great eagerness. 

About Christmas, when the scoters have made their appearance, printed bills are posted at Marseilles, Aix-en-Provence and all the principal towns in the vicinity, stating the intended order of attack upon the birds, and the day and hour at which it is to take place.

The mayors of two or three of the principal places make the necessary arrangements. 

On the eve of the day fixed upon, all the shooters are divided into parties, and each has a boat, a pilot and a commander appointed. 

The assemblage is large, filling the inns and the lodgings to be had at private houses. 

In the morning, at the sound of a drum, the embarkation takes place on the lake named for the first attempt.

The boats, filled with sportsmen, form an extended circle round the flocks of birds at one part of the lake.

The boats then draw in, diminishing the circle by degrees, until the crews are within gunshot of the intended victims. 

At a well-known and preconcerted signal, a partial discharge takes place at the unfortunate birds while swimming on the surface of the water. 

Many are killed on the spot; those which escape the first fire attempt to save themselves by flight, when a second discharge assails them in the air.

Many more fall, and with broken wings and loud cries, are picked by the shooters, who divide the spoil, not without many altercations, and return to land. 

After a short respite, the birds having again collected together on that or some other neighbouring lake, a second advance takes place in the same manner, and the day is passed in making a succession of attacks, each followed by a retreat for a time to allow the birds to reassemble. 

A chasse, as it is termed, of a somewhat similar character, is performed near Bastia, the capital of Corsica.

However, in this locality, the Common Scoter is always accompanied by numbers of the Red-throated Diver which appear to act the part of sentinels outside the flock of ducks.

So quick-sighted are these sentinels, and so instantaneously do they dive, and so rapidly do they swim under water, that hundreds of scoters are killed to one couple of divers.

Enough has been said to show that this bird is strictly a winter visitant with us.

However, it does remain within the precincts of the British Islands until late in the spring, and even, in some instances, until summer has fairly set in.

Flocks have been seen off Dungeness as late as the middle of June, and a writer in The Zoologist states that Lake Windermere is visited every year, about the first week in July, some14 having been observed off Wray Castle at that period in 1848. 

The Common Scoter must, therefore, commence the task of nesting immediately after its return home. 

Up to the present time we have no record of its having bred in the British Islands. 

Mr. Dann states that it breeds in Scandinavia from 800 to 2000 feet below the snow-line, and Mr. Procter found it breeding in Iceland, which is probably its most western limit, for Professor Reinhardt does not include it among the birds of Greenland. 

Eastwardly, it is said to visit the Caspian Sea. 

In the far north, the late Mr. John Wolley found it breeding   in Lapland, and Mr. Alfred Newton informs me that  it is plentiful enough in the interior of that country where it is known as the seabird par excellence, and its musical notes add to the pleasure with which a naturalist explores the countless lakes of that desolate region.

The nest is generally placed in some sheltered spot on the ground, and the eggs, which are six or seven in number, are of a pale buff slightly tinged with green, somewhat more than two inches in length by about one inch and three-quarters in breadth.

The diving powers of the Common Scoter are as perfect as those of any other species which resorts to that mode of procuring its food from the bottom of the turbulent sea.

Its whole structure, its flattened tarsi, large feet and dense plumage are all admirably fitted for the purpose. 

Its flight is rapid, straight, and of sufficient duration to convey the bird from the sea to the inland lakes or from one part of its feeding-ground to another.

Generally, however, these passages from place to place are performed near the surface of the water, but it is said to mount higher in the air when necessity requires it so to do.