Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

Twitching with life

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Winter is a busy time for birds, says Jen Sharp, visitor experience manager at RSPB Fairburn Ings, as we sit by the window of the reserve office on a wet December afternoon. “People come to Fairburn to see lots of them – kingfisher­s, robins, nuthatches, curlews...” Outside, robins, goldfinche­s, sparrows and more go flitting bush to bush to gobble from hanging feeders. “In winter, birds want high-fat foods, which reserves like Fairburn help provide,” says Jen. “They love berries, but our feeders are also stocked with nuts, seeds, and suet balls – packing energy.” As we sip our coffee in the warmer confines of the office, blue tits and blackbirds compete with hungry thrushes and a plucky nuthatch, skittering over branches to a feeder full of suet.

Britain’s birds are threatened by climate change and habitat loss, but I was heartened to hear how reserves like Fairburn Ings, near Castleford, are helping to counter these threats. Jen and I took a walk around to see more of the reserve, which, built on old coalfields, has operated since 1957, and talked about the significan­ce of winter for our birds.

“In winter, birds work harder to find food,” Jen tells me, as we pass the garden beside the visitor centre, a wren sifting through undergrowt­h. As temperatur­es drop, insects diminish. Thrushes, blackbirds, fieldfares and redwings will snaffle berries; secretive birds like wrens and dunnocks

Birds put on a show as they search hard for food in winter, as Simon Zonenblick discovered during a trip to Fairburn Ings Nature Reserve, in West Yorkshire. Main pictures by Simon Hulme.

give predators the slip by avoiding tables and feeders – a tip for gardeners being to rotate these from time to time, lessening the likelihood of predators becoming familiar.

“Many birds spend more time in and around nests,” adds Jen, “but if it’s a territory issue, some are more active in winter.” Robins, for example, will investigat­e their localities, warning rival males with their deceptivel­y chirpy song. Breeding doesn’t usually start until around March, but can begin as early as January, and it is in winter that we hear both males and females singing.

Robins are associated with winter, and in good numbers. The RSPB estimates there are 6,700,000 breeding pairs across Britain. Overall, though, it is a mixed picture for small birds. Milder winters mean birds like chiffchaff and blackcaps are increasing­ly wintering in Britain. Buzzards are booming, and winter birds fare better than their migratory cousins in terms of climate change’s impact. Severe winters are challengin­g, though. Many birds need to find food throughout daylight, requiring around 30 per cent of their body weight to survive cold nights, when some huddle together to conserve body heat. Hoarders like jays repair to “larders” stocked in autumn. Wrens track down hibernatin­g insects among evergreen leaves of ivy.

Flocking increases the chances of locating food, and spotting predators, and no examples are more spectacula­r than flocking starlings – “murmuratio­ns” – which Jen tells me happen mostly between October and March. “Hopefully you’ll see one today,” she says. I hope so, too. But for now, we trudge on, along the aptly named, and muddy, “Riverside Trail”.

Reserves like Fairburn are great for wintering wildfowl, and passerines visiting from Scandinavi­a and Iceland. “Our reserves sometimes flood,” says

Jen, “but the lakes rarely freeze. Even in a cold, wet winter, Yorkshire, compared to Greenland or Siberia, is almost tropical!”

We sit in a hide, watching black-headed gulls and goldeneye spool the rain-studded lake, with cormorants poised on reed “islands” in the darkening distance. A pontoon raft is visible. “Climate change causes fluctuatin­g water levels, to the detriment of island nests – we lost some avocet nests last year,” says Jen. This raft, high enough to overcome rising water levels, will prove suitable for common terns especially.

After watching a heron prowl a stream, we stroll by the old coal tips, restored to deciduous woodland, grassland and a lagoon. Jen acknowledg­es that, to some, habitat “management” represents interferen­ce, but stresses any management is proportion­ate to humanaggra­vated habitat loss or climate change. “At

Fairburn, our land management reflects the needs of birds.”

Wet grasslands support waders like lapwings, redshanks and snipe. Fairburn also hosts curlews, teal and wigeon. Redpolls are seen in the alder trees, and Fairburn’s reedbed is being expanded for the benefit of birds such as breeding reed buntings and bitterns, as well as harvest mice and invertebra­tes.

“We nurture the environmen­t. Willow tits are a success. They’re breeding successful­ly, with healthy population­s.” Jen tells me.

Willow tits are Britain’s most rapidly declining resident birds – down by over 90 per cent since the 1970s, with fewer than 3,000 pairs. “There are many factors,” Jen says, “from drying soils – they like damp – to fragmented woodlands due to urbanisati­on. But Fairburn is bucking the national trend, not least thanks to lots of dead and decaying wood, and scrub.” Wide areas of rewilded land with thickets of young trees are conducive to their survival, making Fairburn ideal. If you see one in your garden, it’s likely to be in winter, when invertebra­tes are scarcer in the countrysid­e, and their attentions turn to berries, nuts and seeds.

Instrument­al to the reserve’s hard work are fantastic volunteers like Duke of Edinburgh

Award student Joseph Boyall, who has given up his Saturdays since August 2020. “I’d never been to Fairburn before,” Joseph tells me, as we chat in the reserve shop. “It’s a real change of scene from my regular job in a factory.” He has taken up birdwatchi­ng himself, and, having completed most of his studies, intends to continue volunteeri­ng for sheer enjoyment of the natural world.

I’ve heard many similar stories from volunteers before, but for anyone unable to venture far from home, Yorkshire’s winters still provide a diversity of birds. Every day in parks, gardens, train stations and city streets. I’ve seen crows, thrushes and yellow wagtails flashing up in streams, or jauntily jouncing along rooftops in the rain. Noticeable against leafless background­s are resident coal tits, great tits and blue tits – among the loveliest sights on a winter morning.

Goosanders glide canals and lakes, bullfinche­s bobble over branches, goldcrests twinkle in the treetops. The latter are a good example of birds whose numbers have risen with milder temperatur­es – more than 10 per cent since the 1960s – though their lives are not without challenges. Britain’s winter birds must contend with scarcer food, cold nocturnal temperatur­es, and threats like climate change, pollution and habitat depletion.

However, their plight is aided by renewed public interest, careful feeding by gardeners, and reserves like Fairburn Ings, where the work of conservati­onists is complement­ed by the unflagging efforts of volunteers, giving up their time to give something back to the natural world. Leaving the office, with dusk setting in, I take a last wander on my own, past the reedbeds and the kingfisher screen, and up towards the old coal tips. Looking up, I notice an unexpected moving shape, sweeping like a figureof-eight. Thirty metres long, it’s the most spectacula­r starling murmuratio­n I’ve ever seen, a swirl of curling black, twisting and dipping like a thunderclo­ud, swerving over treetops and blending into dark sky, a true highlight of what Yorkshire’s winter birdlife has to offer.

■ www.rspb.org.uk/reserves-and-events/ reserves-a-z/fairburn-ings/

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Main picture and above right, a murmuratio­n of starlings over
RSPB Fairburn
Ings at sunset; top, visitor experience manager Jen Sharp scans the horizon; centre, a nuthatch; above, a robin.
STRENGTH IN NUMBERS: Main picture and above right, a murmuratio­n of starlings over RSPB Fairburn Ings at sunset; top, visitor experience manager Jen Sharp scans the horizon; centre, a nuthatch; above, a robin.
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 ?? INSET PICTURE: JAMES HARDISTY. ?? HELPING HANDS: Above, volunteers Sheila Masterton and Christine Stewart in the shop at the reserve; below, Jen Sharp keeps her eyes peeled; inset, a curlew.
INSET PICTURE: JAMES HARDISTY. HELPING HANDS: Above, volunteers Sheila Masterton and Christine Stewart in the shop at the reserve; below, Jen Sharp keeps her eyes peeled; inset, a curlew.
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