• Volunteering with RSPB Scotland

    Our Duke of Edinburgh Award pin badge volunteer Abby is working towards her gold award. Here she tells us about her about her volunteering experience with RSPB Scotland.
  • Peatland in prints

    To celebrate World Peatlands Day 2020 RSPB Scotland's Yvonne McMahon shares a bit about a peatland restoration project at our Loch Gruinart reserve.
  • Five facts about short-eared owls

    Short-eared owls are one of the four species of owl you might see in Scotland. They are medium sized, with mottled brown bodies, pale under-wings and bright yellow eyes, which are very striking with their black outline! Molly Martin shares five facts to familiarise yourself with these gorgeous birds.
  • High-rise living: The return of seabirds

    Homing 70% of UK seabirds population, it is that time of year again when Scotland’s cliffs are bustling with life. In the summer months, the sea exposed cliffs turn into a metropolis of our most loved seabirds. During this time, they are busy building a bond with their beloved partner while protecting their eggs which will soon be hatching. Once the cold winter returns, the seabirds head to open oceans, not reaching land…
  • At the heart of the Rare Invertebrates in the Cairngorms

    Ahead of Volunteers Week next week (1-7 June), Genevieve Tompkins celebrates the remarkable volunteers of the Rare Invertebrates in the Cairngorms project in this blog.
  • Five ways to give nature a home this summer

    RSPB Scotland's Allie McGregor shares five activities you can do to help nature in summer.
  • International Day of Biodiversity: Our solutions are in nature

    RSPB Scotland Policy Officer Erica Mason discusses the International Day of Biodiversity and how lockdown has highlighted the need to treasure our nature.
  • What does biodiversity mean anyway?

    RSPB Scotland’s Kirsty Nutt discusses what biodiversity actually means and why it matters ahead of International Biodiversity Day on 22 May.
  • Five facts about small tortoiseshell butterflies

    One of incredible volunteers, Lorraine Preece, shares some fabulous facts about small tortoisehell butterflies!
  • Meet the Sunnyside Ocean Defenders!

    Nature of Scotland Youth and Education Award Winners Sunnyside Primary shared some of their highlights of what they have been up to since the award ceremony last year!
  • A brief guide to Scotland's spring migrants

    RSPB Scotland's Allie McGregor introduces some of our arriving spring migrants and tips for identifying them.
  • Five facts about eiders

    RSPB Scotland’s Jess Barrett has been seeing lots of eiders on her daily exercise by the Firth of Forth. Here are five facts about these seaducks you need to know.
  • Take the #WildChallenge

    Laura Copley, Scotland Education Families & Youth Manager, fills us in on RSPB’s Wild Challenge Awards scheme as a perfect way to enhance your children’s home-schooling experiences whilst being fun for all the family.
  • Getting my spring nature fix at home

    Chris Bailey, Advisory Manager, would normally be out and about working with farmers at this time of year. He tells us how he is managing to get his wildlife fix without his normal spring surveying. It turns out, friends with lambs are some of the best friends you can have!
  • Five facts about corncrakes

     RSPB Scotland's Jane Shadforth shares five facts about iconic Scottish species, the corncrake.
  • City Nature Challenge 2020 - what did you record?

    Kate Kirkwood, Climate Change Youth Project Officer for our Giving Nature a Home Project in Glasgow, looks back over this year's City Nature Challenge, the amazing response from people taking part across Scotland, some of the species recorded in Glasgow, and a survey we'd be grateful if you could take part in. 

    City Nature Challenge 2020 - what did you record?

    City Nature Challenge is an international project to…

  • Love for local wildlife in lockdown

    RSPB Scotland's Nora Casey gives us tips on how to spot signs of spring, how to engage a toddler with the changing of the seasons, and what the wildlife of Edinburgh is up to at this time of year.
  • An update following the fire at the Tay Reedbeds

    RSPB Scotland's Vicky Turnbull, Warden for the Tay Reedbeds, shares an update following the fire earlier this week.
  • What I miss and what I've found

    Dolphinwatch Volunteer Rebecca tells us about her reasons for volunteering with the Dolphinwatch team in the summer season of 2019 and shares how she is enjoying nature at home and without dolphins!
  • Relaxing with the dawn chorus

    Dawn Chorus Day is coming up on the 3rd of May, a day for celebrating spring, the arrival of many seasonal species and the beautiful song they bring us. It is also a reminder that we don’t want our nature to fall silent.
  • Lockdown with a little one

    Jenny Weston, our Conservation Officer based in our Aberdeen office lives about half an hour inland from Aberdeen. Most of the time though she is a mum to a 21-month-old toddler called Piper and as a result of the current Covid-19 restrictions she’s spending a lot more time trying to entertain her at home. Their childcare is usually shared between herself, her husband, nursery and grandparents.
  • Window-box butterflies

    RSPB Scotland's Paul Walton shares how you can bring butterflies to your window and experience their life cycle from home.
  • Spring in the garden: A home working adventure

    RSPB Scotland’s David Hunt gives us a glimpse into his new home working routine and some of his exciting new colleagues…. magpies, geese, swallows, dinosaurs, knights...
  • Nature doesn't stop

    Heather Beaton, RSPB Scotland's Warden on North Uist shares the way she’s noticed nature carrying on as normal whilst everything else seems to be stopping or changing around her.
  • Knitting for Curlews

    Today marks the third annual World Curlew Day! We want to raise awareness of these wonderful wading birds so we’re marking the day by bringing back the beautiful curlew knitting patterns we shared with you two years ago. 

    Knitting for Curlews

    Curlews, with their bubbling calls and distinctive long curved bill, are a firm favourite for many of us and depending on the time of year can be seen along beach shorelines or up in…