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Peak District Retreat Blog

Wildlife and general news about the Retreat and its environment

A blog to share barn owl and other wildlife and general news about the Retreat and its environment. 

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The curlews have returned to our breeding grounds

28. February 2025, Wildlife
Show larger version for: Curlew courtship display

The curlews are returning to their breeding grounds around us.

We've heard and seen the first curlews of the year. Each year the curlews return to the moorlands around us to nest on the wet moorland ground which is ideal feeding grounds for them and their chicks.

Staffordshire Wildlife Trust (SWT) manage most of the land surrounding us as a wildlife corridor between the Roaches nature reserve and Black Brook nature reserve. Curlews are a species in decline so SWT pays special attention to managing their land so as to best accommodate the curlews. Curlews like to nest in tall grass for protection, but adjacent to open land so that they can see what is coming. SWT ‘tops’ (threshes) patches of the tall rushes to make patches of open land adjacent to patches of undisturbed rushes. For the last few years, at our invitation, they have managed our land in the same way.

So far I don't have any photos of this year's curlews, so I've attached some photos of a curlew courting display that I observed in 2019, and some other past photos too.

READ MORE: The curlews have returned to our breeding grounds

  • Tags:
  • curlew
  • nesting

Barn owl nesting 2024 - end of season activity report

01. October 2024, Wildlife
Show larger version for: Barn owl courting behaviour

During 2024 there was no owl breeding in our barn owl nest box.

During the winter 2023/24 one owl (female we think) roosted in the box every single daytime for over 6 months, leaving at dusk to go hunting and returning around dawn. During that time we didn't see a second owl.

We might have expected to see them together as a pair from around Jan/Feb but still we saw a second owl on only a couple of occasions, and the female was roosting here less regularly, not being seen at all from May onwards for two to three months.

Perhaps the pair nested somewhere else this year. We saw more of them July/August, with some courting behaviour (see photos) but no nesting or breeding.

READ MORE: Barn owl nesting 2024 - end of season activity report

  • Tags:
  • barn owl
  • nesting
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