
Allendale, Northumberland: Once again, wildlife has made a home in our garden, in part because they feel safe here
A big moon is cresting the Scots pine as I sit at an upstairs window looking down on to the garden. Awaiting the dusk emergence of a female tawny owl has become an evening ritual. After a day spent in the confines of a nest box in our sycamore tree, her departure shifts back by a few minutes every night. Completely silent, she drops towards the woodland border and skims the plants, each time on the same trajectory, a grey shadow in the gloaming.
Another movement on the path below catches my eye: a woodcock slinking along, using the box hedge to disguise her passage. If I hadn’t been watching for the owl I would never have known that she too is nesting somewhere in the garden’s thick leafiness. In July 2023, I wrote about a woodcock nesting in a flower border a few metres from the house, four chicks successfully hatching from four eggs. Last year, another attempt was disturbed by a cat captured on trailcam. This may be the same bird returned for a third time. Woodcocks are extremely secretive birds, their close proximity to a house very unusual.
Continue reading...United Kingdom
EUROPE
Related News
Bolivia miners clash with police, President Paz under fire
2h ago

British Gas customers to receive up to £112m in compensation over prepayment meters
2h ago
Cem Özdemir, first German state premier with Turkish roots
1d ago
Ceasefire in sight? What's next for Russia's war in Ukraine
1d ago

The race to understand how rat-virus spreads
1d ago