A blog to share barn owl and other wildlife and general news about the Retreat and its environment.
The barn owl pair perch together on the nest box ledge
24. April 2025, Wildlife
Both barn owls left the box briefly to perch on the ledge, with the female to the left and the male to the right.
Inside the box there are four eggs. This may be the full clutch, or their may be more to come - in a previous year there was a 5-day gap between the laying of the penultimate egg and the last egg.
Our barn owls have now laid four eggs in our nest box
20. April 2025, Wildlife
The female barn owl steps aside for a stretch and reveals that she has laid a fourth egg. Is that it, or might there be more to come?
Barn owl egg number three was laid this afternoon
17. April 2025, Wildlife
We now have three eggs in the barn owl nest box.
There may yet be more to come, though the male owl is not doing a good job of bringing food to the female and that may inhibit further egg production.
In 2023 there were four eggs, and in 2020 there were six.
Our resident barn owl has laid a second egg in our nestbox
14. April 2025, Wildlife
A second egg has been laid by our resident barn owl.
There are likely to be more laid over the next few days - watch this space.
A pale phase/pale morph common buzzard perches and flies
12. April 2025, Wildlife
This pale buzzard has been seen here a few times, perching on a fence post on our boundary.
It has strikingly white features compared to the usual buzzard plumage.
Pale morph buzzards seem to be a variant that varies across the country, being more common in SW England than around here.
Read the rest of the article: A pale phase/pale morph common buzzard perches and flies
Our first barn owl egg of 2025 has been laid in our nestbox
12. April 2025, Wildlife
The first barn owl egg has been laid.
A typical clutch is 4-7 eggs. Look out for the next arrival over the next day or two…
A courting barn owl pair settles into the nest box
11. April 2025, Wildlife
The barn owls won the tussle with stock doves and others to occupy the nest box. A pair moved in a week ago and seem settled in for the season.
You can monitor them on our live cams.
The one that looks a little paler over the head and back is the male (to the right on the attached photo), and the slightly darker one (to the left) is the female. It is difficult to distinguish them if you see them alone and don't have the other with which to compare. If you get a good view on the outside camera in daylight you may be able to distinguish a couple of dozen small black spots on the white feathers on the flanks of one of them (though they may be hidden by the folded wings). This is the female, the male not having any such spots (the second photo shows the female).
The expected behaviour is that the female will hardly leave the box at all, or even not at all, for the next two months, so you will almost always see at least one owl when you look at the in-box camera. The male is supposed to do all the hunting, bringing food to her, and to her and the young once they hatch. Once the young are about four weeks old and getting larger and needing more food the female starts hunting as well.
Read the rest of the article: A courting barn owl pair settles into the nest box
Two jackdaws raided the barn owl nest box today
22. March 2025, Wildlife
The barn owl did not return to the nest box to roost this morning. Two jackdaws took the opportunity to raid the box.
They were cautious initially, looking around carefully before entering the box, but returned time and again all day.
They removed some owl pellets, and a lot of mouthfuls of the wood-shavings which we had put in the base of the nest box for the barn owls. Were they tidying the box, to prepare it to be their own nest-space, or were they taking materials to use on a nest elsewhere? We'll have wait to see what happens next.
During the day the stock doves also visited the box but left as soon as the jackdaws returned, and a pair of blue tits visited too when there were no other birds around.
Read the rest of the article: Two jackdaws raided the barn owl nest box today
Caught on camera: A red-legged partridge in our farmyard
13. March 2025, Wildlife
I've seen these around the land occasionally. But this is the first time I've got a photo of a red-legged partridge.
I saw it pecking around our farmyard, but it did a runner as soon as it saw me with a camera.
We have live streaming camera feeds from our barn owl nest box.
The owl activity varies by season.
Currently we have one barn owl roosting most daytimes from approximately 5-8 a.m. until 4-8 p.m. During her residence you will see her on the camera feed inside the nest box. You may catch her perching on the ledge outside the box when she arrives in the early morning and/or when she exists the box late afternoon/dusk.
If they use the box for breeding then it will be permanently occupied by the female for about three months during which time the male is in charge of hunting and providing.
The camera feeds are on our live owl cam page.
Read the rest of the article: Visit our Barn owl nest box live camera feeds now