• We are now on Facebook

    Yes RSPB Pagham Harbour & Medmerry now has it's own Facebook page... https://www.facebook.com/RSPBPaghamHarbour/

  • New Year Brings a Clean Beach

    The vegetative shingle habitats around the reserve provide some of our most threated species a safe place to live. However with the  daily rise and fall of the tide a continuous delivery of a variety of waste is deposited on the beach. This will pose a unseen threat to the species that are either feed in the strandline or collect their nesting material from it. As the New Year is heralded in 17 keen volunteers donned their…

  • An Autumn of few surprises moves in to winter of frantic activity – Recent sightings Nov 2019

    The highlight of a quiet autumn migration was the appearance of a juvenile Rose-Coloured Starling which appeared for a few days with the starlings feeding in the saltmarsh off the tramway near the visitor centre. The migrants started for flow through and many birdwatchers marvelled at Redstarts, Ringed Ouzels, Spotted and Pied flycatchers as they fed up before their crossings to the continent and on towards Africa. Out…

  • Autumn has arrived – Recent Sighting August

    The seabird season has finally ended with the final Sandwich Terns fledging at the beginning of the month. The final results of a very successful season are 13 Little Tern, 139 Sandwich Tern and 12 Common Tern fledged. Nevertheless, there has been a continued present of a large post breed flock of terns around Church Norton consisting predominantly of Sandwich Tern with a few common and little amongst them. Some lucky…

  • Pagham Harbour LNR Comunity Forum January 2019

    Pagham Harbour Local Nature Reserve

    Communities Forum

    29th January 2019

    Pagham Visitor Centre

    Attendees:

    Pieter Montyn, County Councillor, WSCC (Chair)

    Steve Webster, Reserve Manager, RSPB

    Tim Callaway, Hants and IOW Area Manager, RSPB

    Charlotte Weller, Countryside Services Manager, WSCC

    1. Welcome and Introductions

    Introductions were made by the Chairman, Pieter Montyn.

    1. Reserve Management Update

    Steve Webster made…

  • It's not all about the birds !!!

    The summer has arrived and in the distance the noise of the seabird colony can be clearly heard. but do not forget to look downwards as there are many other interesting beasties moving around you feet. As you observe the seabirds another visitor has been coming in from the continent, painted ladies have become an increasingly numerous migrant over the summer as warm air moves up from Spain. birds are well known for their…

  • A summer of Seabirds, Quail and Spoonbill – Sightings June to July

    Summer is usually a quiet affair when talking about the birds. That’s not because there isn’t any, it is just that as the summer progresses the business of rearing the next generation is in full swing. If you are patient and willing to spend time observing the reeds and bushes, you will observe many warblers – such as whitethroats, reed warbler, sedge warbler, blackcap all secretly collecting food for the young. However…

  • Hire a bike and explore our Medmerry reserve.

    We now have a new cycle path linking Pagham Harbour reserve to our Medmerry reserve and if you forget your bike you can hire one from outside our Pagham Harbour Visitor Centre. The scheme is run by App-Bike and you can download the app via their website - https://www.app-bike.co.uk/ 

    You can cycle all round Medmerry on the permissive cycle paths...

    .... or alternatively you can take the Route 88 / Bill Way and cycle…

  • Kestrel success and yet another character to watch

    Well it has been an excellent year for our birds of prey. Following the tawny owls success in rearing three owlets, the kestrels have managed to get all five of their chicks to fledging. They decided to leave the box this week at first sitting on top of it but gradually moving further afield. They are still reliant on the parents for at least another month as they learn how to hunt and fend for themselves. This juvenile…

  • Visiting in June

    One of the highlight of June is our breeding seabirds. Common tern, sandwich tern and little tern all breed in the harbour on Tern Island and New Island along with big numbers of black-headed gulls and a handful of Mediterranean gulls.

    Little tern chicks - Ivan Lang

    Ringed plovers and oystercatchers occupy the fringes and it is a cacophony of noise with birds bickering with neighbours or greeting partners and parents…

  • Kestrels doing well

    Our kestrel parents have been doing a good job keeping their chicks fed. Watching the adults hunt in the recent stormy weather really exemplifies their hovering skills. Despite being buffeted by the wind their heads remained fixed, focused on searching for their prey, all the while their wings and tail continually adjust to the constant changes in wind direction and speed.

    Looking at them in an action through the telescope…

  • A quiet spring moves in to summer – May to early June Sightings

    As May comes to an end, most of the expected summer visitors are in full attendance and have progressed to starting their new families. Spring proved very quiet with no unusual sightings to spark our bird watchers in to action. As June began the two most interesting sightings were two Spoonbill and a male Garganey on the Stilt Pools.

     

    This period of the year is always perceived as a quiet period for birds but that’s not…

  • Kestrel chicks hatched

    So as I suspected the kestrel eggs started hatching as soon as I took time off - they did the same last year and I'm sure they do it on purpose! Anyway, all five eggs hatched and the chicks are currently doing well with dad bringing in food for the female to feed her young.

      

    She will continue to brood for up to 2 weeks before joining the male hunting for food to feed their rapidly growing chicks. The youngsters won…

  • Special Open Day

    To celebrate our wonderful reserve and the work we have done on our Discovery Zone, we are inviting you to try your hand at a host of FREE activities from pond dipping and bug hunting, to mud-sifting, arts & crafts and wildlife watching!

    BBC One Show’s Mike Dilger will be joining in the fun as our special guest!

    So come on down and have a fun-filled day getting closer to nature.

    10am – 4pm

    All activities…

  • Mixed Weather this spring but migration continues – April and May Sightings

    In February we were privileged to have excellent views of the Tawny Owl adult roosting in the trees around the discovery area. As hoped they did nest in the box and many of you would have been following there exploits on the various blogs over the last few months. The baby ‘s finally showed their faces as eager birdwatches looked on. All three young successfully branched and promptly disappeared in to the undergrowth…

  • Gorgeous tawny owls

    As predicted the tawny owls have left their nestbox. The first chick 'branched on Friday night with the second following the night after. These two owlets gave us beautiful views over the weekend and even a couple of hardened local birders uttered an 'aawhhh' and gave them a cute rating of 11/10!

    The keen-eyed also spotted their evening meal their parents had stashed away in another tree for them nearby…

  • News from the creche...

    The three tawny owl chicks have grown rapidly and are getting curious about the world outside their box. Typically they remain in the nest for 25 – 30 days before moving out onto nearby branches, an act called ‘branching’, so it won’t be long before they leave their natal home. However, they won’t actually fly until approximately 32 -37 days old and will still be dependant on their parents feeding them for a further three…

  • Why visit in May?...

    May is a beautiful month on our reserve. The bird song is at its peak as the breeding season continues in earnest, while the plants and trees burst into leaf which in turn brings out a wealth of insect life. Cuckoos are often heard and seen around Church Norton, Yeoman’s Field, our Discovery Zone and the Ham area on Medmerry.

    Cuckoo - Ben Andrew (rspb-images.com)

    Swifts arrive and spotted flycatchers pass through…

  • Easter brings eggs and chicks.

    Monday morning I switched the nest cams on to find our kestrels had laid their first egg.

    This was promptly followed by a second on Wednesday and they now have three eggs.

    This is typical behaviour, with kestrels normally laying every other day with a clutch of 3 - 6 eggs. Generally when the third egg is laid the female will settle down to incubate for approximately four weeks.

    The blue tits have been busy. One pair…

  • Stars of our reality show…

    Our tawny owl has been very coy about showing us what she is sitting on but we did manage to glimpse at least three eggs. This week she delighted us with a peek at two newly hatched chicks. She has been keeping them warm and feeding them.

    Meanwhile the male kestrel has been bringing gifts for his mate in their box, including small mammals and a lizard, which the female quickly relieves him of! No eggs yet but the female…

  • After the wind the sun

    The last week has seen the whole gambit of weather from gale force winds, heavy rain and even some sheet but finally the sun has come out. This has heralded a burst of activity of birds preparing for spring the Tawny Owls in their box have a head start and are already sitting on eggs. Blue Tit's are feverishly collecting nesting material and the kestrel are a little more laid back, no need to collect nesting material…

  • Why visit RSPB Pagham Harbour & Medmerry in April...

    Surrounded by urban sprawl on either side, like a pair of green oases, free of light pollution and jutting out into the English Channel on the Manhood Peninsula, our reserves of Pagham Harbour and Medmerry are migration hotspots. Some birds will stay all summer while others will rest and feed before continuing their journeys further inland.

    Staring out from the beach swallows can be seen flying in off the sea and wheatears…

  • hot off the press -- kestrel returns

    Last year a pair of Kestrels nested near the visitor centre and the public watched as the breeding season unfolded live in the VC. good news is that a Kestrel has returned to the box for the first time this morning, hopefully this is the start of the drama again.

  • Spring arrives early but does it! -- Recent Sightings February 2019

    February has turned out to be the warmest on record in the UK and this has been shown with the activity from all the wildlife gearing up for the spring season. However, casting the mind back to last year, we were in the middle of a freeze, what a difference a year makes. As with last year the visitor centre will be a hub of activity as the nest cam’s start appearing on the screen. The warm weather has got one p…

  • Why visit Pagham Harbour & Medmerry in March

    March is officially the first month of spring and there are signs all across our reserves of Pagham Harbour & Medmerry. The warm sunshine encourages lesser celandine to open its flowers like splashes of gold on a green canvas.

    Lesser Celandine

    The silky paws of the pussy willow catkins ripen, transforming into yellow puffs full of pollen, attracting early bees and hoverflies. Blackthorn hedges burst into blossom…