Carrying out bird surveys is a highlight of my Ingleborough calendar. Starting in late April through to the end of June I carry out two surveys at each location, leaving a month between visits. I’m always watching the weather forecast keenly during this period, waiting for calm and sunny mornings when birds are most likely to be singing their hearts out.
They are early starts, aiming to be in position to start surveying at 6:30am. Following the BTO’s (British Trust for Ornithology) Breeding Bird Survey methodology I walk two transects, each 1km long and subdivided into 200m sections. Along the way I pause, watch and listen, recording all bird species I see and hear. It’s a wonderful chance to slow down and observe.
There are two long running BTO Breeding Bird Surveys on Ingleborough National Nature Reserve which are carried out by Natural England staff. The results from these are part of BTO’s national volunteer project to monitor changes in breeding bird populations in the UK. We set up two additional surveys at the start of Wild Ingleborough, and although these aren’t part of BTO’s project, we used the same methodology so the results are comparable.