Month: March 2022

  • The first egg of the year

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    The barn owls haven’t wasted any time this spring and the female has just produced her first egg! She’ll stay in the nest box now as she lays more eggs over the next few days and the male will now do all the hunting for them both, so they’ll both be kept busy.

    It’s early in the year still and the weather is unpredictable, but so long as there isn’t prolonged rain or snow covering the ground they should be fine.

    Two eggs
    Three eggs

    Update 24 April 2022. Only three eggs this year (compared to six last year). It might have been the warm weather early this spring that started the female laying earlier than usual and the subsequent cold weather that stopped her after three. Whatever reason, three is what she has, and so far things are going well with the male bringing back plenty of prey. The first egg should hatch this week, fingers crossed.

    Four eggs

    Update 1 May 2022. 31 days since the first egg was laid and it should have hatched today, but we find the female has laid a fourth egg instead. Very strange behaviour: it might be she was waiting for the weather to warm up, or it was too cold for the first three and she’s started again. We’ll know over the next few days.

  • Kestrels wanted

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    We have a new nest box on one of the old oak trees on the edge of the field: this one for kestrels. Thanks to John and Mary from Talon Nest Boxes. Now we wait…

  • Toad time

    And now it’s time for the toads: unlike frogs they’re quite happy to be out on dry land.

    Dry warty skin, crawling instead of hopping and out on dry land = toad!

  • Oystercatchers

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    A long way from home* but these three oystercatchers seem happy enough rootling around the edge of the pond.

    *Shropshire isn’t renowned for its coast, or oysters!

  • A hare and its predators

    Filmed over two nights on the same camera at a busy crossroads: a hare, a cat, a fox and a badger.

    And here’s a composition of all four to show their relative sizes (the hare is closer to the camera so it looks bigger than it is).

    Hare, fox, badger and cat
  • How baby barn owls are made

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    WARNING. Do not watch if you have a nervous disposition. It’s not pretty and there’s not much romance involved but it’s what barn owls do in spring!

  • Daytime owls

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    And now we have a pair of barn owls in the nest box, busy attending to each other and waiting the day out until they get get back out in the dark to hunt.

  • Hare

    We spotted this brown hare a few days ago running at full pelt into the distance but this morning filmed it on the trail cam undisturbed in the early morning sun. It is coming into the field (we hope looking for a nesting site) through the holes in the hedge that the badgers make. Unfortunately badgers and hares don’t mix well together but there’s not way we can let one in but not the other: we’ll have to leave nature to do its thing.

  • Daytime owl

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    It’s the first time one of the owls has stayed the day. It’s a bit early to be too optimistic but a good sign that they might be getting ready to nest. We hope!