• Cuttlebone Murmuration

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 9th – 15th November 2024

    The Starling murmuration has continued to build at Mersehead this week with some great footage captured over the weekend from Meida Hide. Starling murmurations are an incredible winter wildlife phenomena often occurring at dusk, just before the birds roost overnight which provides them with safety in numbers, warmth and the opportunity to share information about the best…

  • 1, 2, 3...

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 4th - 8th November 2024
    These gloomy days won't be enough to stop us counting! The overcast weather this week brings on the season for wellies and woolly hats atop the high sand dunes as we continue to carry out bird count surveys. This Monday we completed a Barnacle goose count across Mersehead reserve with a slightly lower than average total of 3950 individuals, including the five leucistic barnacle…
  • Ghostly White

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 26th October – 1st November 2024

    Barnacle geese are arguably the star attraction of the reserve and numbers have been building steadily over the past month as the geese return from their breeding grounds in Svalbard. A peak count for the reserve so far this autumn has been 8,930. Amongst the thousands the black and white stripes, there have been five ghostly pale birds – these are leuci…

  • A Feast for the Badgers

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 19th - 25th October. 

    Autumn is well in to way and it looks absolutely beautiful on Mersehead!

    Mute Swans and Canada Geese from Meida hide. Photo credit: K. Stevenson. 

    In the past couple weeks, we have been hosting ‘Badger Banquets’ here at Mersehead. These events give people the opportunity to observe badgers in the natural habitat from the comfort of our Sulwath Centre. We are lucky enough to…

  • Autumn Leaves Me Feeling Happy

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 12th – 18th October 2024

    Autumn has officially arrived at Mersehead, and the changes that have occurred here in recent weeks have left the landscape looking particularly beautiful.

    Barnacle Geese at RSPB Mersehead. Photo credit: F. Sanders.


    On Monday evening, in the last of the golden sun, I meandered along the reserve footpaths to marvel at the autumn spectacles. Thousands of red Hawthorn…

  • Welcoming some new arrivals to Mersehead

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 5th – 11th October 2024

    Snow geese? [tick] Fields brimming with Barnacle Geese? [tick] Whooper Swans? [tick] New boardwalk at Meida Hide? [tick] 

    It’s been an exciting week at RSPB Mersehead with the number and variety of wintering birds joining us continues to grow, and the installation of a new boardwalk up to the Meida Hide is completed.

    New arrivals

    This week on the reserve we were thrilled…

  • The Barnies are Back!

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 28th September - 4th October 2024
    I'm excited to announce the much-anticipated arrival of the Barnacle Geese! The official Barnacle goose count carried out on Wednesday 2nd October revealed an impressive total of 6,000 individuals in the area with 5,500 of those at Mersehead. The goose count will be carried out weekly to monitor the location and size of the populations until late spring. The Barnacle…
  • And So it Begins

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 21st – 27th September 2024

    The seasons are changing as we leave summer behind and move forward into autumn. We began the annual task of cutting and nutrient stripping our wildflower meadows this week. Wildflowers thrive on poor nutrient depleted soils as this reduces competition from quick growing grasses which would smother out the wildflowers in a nutrient rich environment. At the end of summer…

  • New Beginnings and Strange Shrimp

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 14th - 20th Septemper

    Hi, my name is Keira, and I am the new residential volunteer here at RSPB Mersehead.

    I have spent the past couple of years living in the Lake District, so I am no stranger to natural beauty. However, since coming to Mersehead I can confidently say that it is a strong contender for one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever had the pleasure of visiting. I am extremely lucky to…

  • Seesawing Between Seasons

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 7th – 13th September 2024

    September Evening At Mersehead. Photo Credit: C Glass

    September at Mersehead is a time for taking stock as we slowly move from summer into autumn and prepare for the arrival of wintering waterbirds from the end of the month. Our survey programme will be changing, and focus will turn to habitat management to benefit next year’s breeding birds and Natterjack Toads. We also…

  • Buzzing About Bees

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 31st August – 6th September 2024

    Bumblebees are colourful, hairy insects that play a vital role in the pollination of crops, flowers, and fruits. Well known for their ‘bumbling’ flight, bumblebees are widely recognised for the loud buzzing noise they make. Unsurprisingly, this is where their scientific name 'Bombus' originates from, translating to ‘booming’.

  • The Fifteen Minute Voyages of a Butterfly Counter

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 17th – 23rd August 2024

    From Lillian to Lepidoptera

    It has been a wet, windy and wild week on the reserve to say the least! The combination of storm Lillian and some unusually high August tides saw the Merse spectacularly inundated.  Faced with such conditions, staff time is split between ensuring our livestock are doing well in the harsher conditions and checking for storm damage, such as fallen…

  • What a Difference a Day Makes

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 10th – 16th August 2024

    It’s been a mixed bag of weather this week with days of heavy rain and bright sunshine the next. But that doesn’t deter us at Mersehead!  In this week’s blog hear how our volunteers braved the rain to join us for our summer BBQ, see our Marsh Harrier fledglings in flight, and learn more about the variety of fungi we are finding near our woodland paths.

  • I'm Ready Wing You Are

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 3rd August – 9th August

    A truly momentous moment was recorded at RSPB Mersehead earlier this week. For the first time since the RSPB took over ownership of Mersehead in 1993, Marsh Harriers (Circus aeruginosus) have successfully bred on the reserve. You can see a photograph of the beautiful chicks below! 

    ‘Chick A’ and ‘Chick AB’ at nest location, RSPB Mersehead. Photo credit: G. Chambers.…

  • Purple Kaleidoscope

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 20th – 26th July 2024

    Flat, alluvial, frequently marshy land bordering upon a river, a river estuary or the sea, specifically applied to the land bordering the Solway Firth – definition of “merse” Scottish National Dictionary.

    The above definition gives a good indication as to where Mersehead obtained its name. The past couple of weeks has seen us spending time out on the merse…

  • A Trip Down Rainbow Lane

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 13th July – 18th July

    Colourful wildflowers at RSPB Mersehead. Photo credit: F. Sanders.

    ‘Rainbow Lane’ is the name given to the path that leads from the main entrance track at RSPB Mersehead to the sand dunes. As the story goes, previous tenants of Lapwing cottage observed numerous gorgeous rainbows over that path, eventually coining the name ‘Rainbow Lane’. Many moons later, that…

  • A Foray into the Worlds of Butterflies and Fungi

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 6th – 12th July 2024

    In this week of rather changeable weather, we have been continuing to focus on maintenance work at Mersehead.  While it sometimes feels like we are trying to beat a strimming world record, it’s important that we keep our electric fencing clear of vegetation and the water troughs in good working order for the livestock, during our summer of conservation grazing. 

    Moving…

  • A Moment of Prehistoric Proportions

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 29th June – 05th July 2024

    After the vibrancy of the breeding bird season, the summer months feel naturally calmer on the reserve.  Dawn and dusk choruses alongside the springtime territorial singing of our bird species have now faded into the bucolic bleats of sheep and lows of our grazing cattle.  While these moments may seem and feel quieter, the summertime offers a great opportunity to discover…

  • A Volunteering Opportunity

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 22nd – 28th June 2024

    Mersehead would not be the amazing reserve for wildlife that it is, if it were not for our dedicated band of volunteers.

    Our “Tuesday” Volunteers arrive week in, week out completing everything from practical habitat management such as scrub removal to benefit the UK’s rarest amphibian the Natterjack Toad, to completing wildflower meadow management and improving…

  • Maintenance Madness

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 15th June – 21st June

    Saturday 15th June marked the beginning of “Maintenance Week” at RSPB Mersehead. During this week, our holiday homes (Barnacle and Shelduck) don’t have any bookings, enabling us to give these cottages a little TLC! Thanks to the hard work of both our staff and volunteers, the insides and outsides of these holiday cottages are looking spick and span. Our volunteers whitewashed…

  • Hunting High and Low

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 8th – 14th June 2024

    We may be asking ourselves where the summer has gone but the weather hasn’t stopped us getting on with our survey and maintenance work on the reserve. 

    As you will have seen from recent blogs our focus has been preparing for the return of livestock to the reserve so we can reap the benefits of conservation grazing.  A special thanks to our Tuesday volunteers for their…

  • Four Seasons in One Day is Never 'Boreing'

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 1st June– 07th June 2024

    It has been another busy week this week on the reserve, with our staff and volunteers having to battle against some rather wet and windy moments in between some glorious sunshine.  Much of the focus of our reserve staff over the past months has been on our breeding survey work and while this is still continuing, you may have noticed the last couple of blogs have focussed…

  • Welcome to Your Summer Home

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 25th – 31st May 2024

    Following on from the theme of last week’s blog, we were delighted to welcome back the Aberdeen Angus herd to Mersehead for the summer. Currently in the wet grassland compartment to the left of main footpath up to the woodland, cattle are an important aspect of managing the habitats across Mersehead for various species.

    1. The cattle help control vegetation growth by…
  • A Conservation Community of Grazers

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 18th – 24th May 2024

    A Grazing Community

    Throughout our winter months Mersehead is descended upon by our beloved Barnacle Geese, while our Barnies return to their Svalbardian shores, a spring chorus of Natterjack toads can be heard for miles, however in the summer months one of our biggest visitor draws are of a slightly more domestic nature.  This week our reserve team have begun preparing for…

  • I Spy with my Little Eye

    RSPB Mersehead Blog 11th – 17th May 2024

    Survey season is in full flow at Mersehead and Kirkconnell Reserves and, over the past week, we have walked far and wide in search of breeding waders, Lapwing chicks, Natterjack Toad spawn strings, and butterflies. Exploring almost every square inch of a nature reserve can reveal interesting finds including amazing species of both flora and fauna, animal prints, and beautiful…