Scoopfeeds — Intelligent news, curated.
Country diary: Nesting mallard, owl and woodcock in our garden – this is the ‘human shield’ effect | Susie White
environment

Country diary: Nesting mallard, owl and woodcock in our garden – this is the ‘human shield’ effect | Susie White

The Guardian Environment · May 11, 2026, 4:30 AM

Why this matters: environmental and climate reporting with long-term consequences.

Allendale, Northumberland: Once again, wildlife has made a home here, in part because they feel safe. 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...

Article preview — originally published by The Guardian Environment. Full story at the source.
Read full story on The Guardian Environment → More top stories
Aggregated and edited by the Scoop newsroom. We surface news from The Guardian Environment alongside other reporting so you can compare coverage in one place. Editorial policy · Corrections · About Scoop