Beaming to your computer, live from Redgrave & Lopham Fen (When our very rural broadband connection is up to it!) you can now watch ‘Mr & Mrs P’ and their baby chick P's with some stunning footage from within their nest box.
This pair of barn owls have made it their home for the second year running, having successfully raised four barn owl chicks last year. The owls have been unofficially named after Steve Piotrowski, the Trust’s resident barn owl expert and pioneer of barn owl conservation in Suffolk.
So, get involved, keep an eye on our barn owls and let us know in the comments section if you see anything interesting. We hope to share many special barn owl moments with you.
This has been made possible with the techy wizardry of Wildlife Whisperer and kind financial support from Barnes Construction.
So wow your friends and family this weekend whilst having a barbecue, spending time in the garden or putting your feet up with this addictive and essential viewing.
Friday, 25 May 2012
iSpying barn owls
Bringing back Suffolk’s barn owls
Help us bring back Suffolk’s barn owls by adding your barn owl sightings to our new interactive online map. Suffolk Wildlife Trust will use the information gathered through this site to:
- help expand the range of barn owls
- to target nest box installation
- and provide habitat advice where it is most needed
Suffolk’s barn owls
Barn owl numbers have declined markedly in the UK since the 1930s. Suffolk records for 1985 show 150 breeding pairs, all nesting in farm buildings or in natural sites such as hollow trees. By 2005, there were thought to be around 125 pairs, restricted almost exclusively to north-east Suffolk. The lack of natural nest sites was highlighted as the critical factor limiting their breeding success.
Since then, Suffolk Wildlife Trust and Suffolk Ornithologists Group have worked with community groups and landowners to install over 1,000 nest boxes in areas where there are known or historic barn owl populations. Nest box checks from the 2011 breeding season found 192 breeding pairs in boxes.
Friday, 4 May 2012
Something wild for the garden?
With the rain holding off this weekend this is an opportune moment to get things done around the garden - your own personal nature reserve.
I have managed to encourage a pair of goldfinches into my garden by simply perservering with a feeder full of niger seed - they've just found it - and the bird box situated under the eaves of my childrens playhouse has encouraged a pair of nesting blue tits. Simple additions like these have brought a new world of learning and discovery at our breakfast table.
There are several plant sales happening at Trust centres over the next fortnight with local enthusiasts and experts on hand to help you make the right choice.
Sunday 6th May - Lackford Lakes - 10am - 4pm
Sunday 13th May - Foxburow Farm - 2pm - 4pm
Sunday 20th May - Upper Abbey Farm, Leiston - 10.30am - 3pm
We also provide advice on a number of ways to improve wildlife in your garden or business grounds with our range of online factsheets.
If we connected everyones gardens in the UK it would amount to an area 7 times that of greater London linking wildlife to the wider countryside so go and find your green fingers in the shed or greenhouse, and take in the splendour of Spring on your doorstep this weekend.
I have managed to encourage a pair of goldfinches into my garden by simply perservering with a feeder full of niger seed - they've just found it - and the bird box situated under the eaves of my childrens playhouse has encouraged a pair of nesting blue tits. Simple additions like these have brought a new world of learning and discovery at our breakfast table.
There are several plant sales happening at Trust centres over the next fortnight with local enthusiasts and experts on hand to help you make the right choice.
Sunday 6th May - Lackford Lakes - 10am - 4pm
Sunday 13th May - Foxburow Farm - 2pm - 4pm
Sunday 20th May - Upper Abbey Farm, Leiston - 10.30am - 3pm
We also provide advice on a number of ways to improve wildlife in your garden or business grounds with our range of online factsheets.
If we connected everyones gardens in the UK it would amount to an area 7 times that of greater London linking wildlife to the wider countryside so go and find your green fingers in the shed or greenhouse, and take in the splendour of Spring on your doorstep this weekend.
Celebrating your businesses natural environment
Has your
business created a workplace garden for staff to enjoy and wildlife to thrive
in?
The Wildlife Trusts and Royal Horticultural Society are running a
competition to reward those who turn their gardens into wildlife havens. The
Big Wildlife Garden includes a Business category and there is still time to
enter at www.bigwildlifegarden.org.uk – entries close on Sunday 20 May. You
can enter the Business category if you are a business with your own workplace
wildlife garden. Winners will receive two tickets to the prestigious RHS Hampton Court
Palace Flower Show, where the awards ceremony and exclusive wildlife gardening
masterclass will be held on 6 July. They
will also receive a year’s membership of the RHS and The Wildlife Trusts, and a
plaque for the garden.
The Big
Wildlife Garden Competition is funded by Defra.
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