The Nesting Season at Caerlaverock (and recent sightings)

The nesting season is well underway and our site hosts a wide variety of resident and summer migrants raising chicks which will hopefully fledge in the coming weeks.

Species like great tits will use the natural landscape such as old woodpecker’s holes or cavities in trees. Some species including starlings, jackdaws and house sparrows are currently using multiple buildings on site for nesting. The gaps in buildings and guttering provide a warm, sheltered area for chicks to be raised. Our hides are also in use not just by visitors but birds as well! Our Saltcot Merse Observatory is home to many swallows that use our grass rooves as nesting sites.

Along the avenue, the mature trees are host to over 50 nests that are being used by rooks. These corvids are generalist meaning they eat pretty much anything and everything they can get their beaks on. They nest in large communities called rookeries and you will often see them in big groups feeding with other corvids including jackdaws in fields.

Latest sightings: 14th – 21st May

Black-tailed godwit

Black-headed gull

Blackcap

Brown hare

Canada goose

Chiffchaff

Common buzzard

Four-spotted chaser

Gadwall

Grey heron



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House martin

Lapwing

Linnet

Little egret

Mallard and ducklings

Moorhen and chicks

Mute swan

Oystercatcher

Pink-footed goose

Redshank

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Reed bunting

Reed warbler

Roe deer and fawn

Sedge warbler

Shelduck

Skylark

Sparrowhawk

Swallow

Tree sparrow

Weasel

Whooper swan

Written by Jacob Campbell

Feature image of moorhen chick by Alex Hillier

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