Quite the most phenomenal month. Obviously our figures have been boosted by Jonny’s monitoring of titmouse boxes in the Trowbridge area and beyond, but particularly Green Land and Biss Woods. In addition, as part of his role at the WSBRC, monitoring Tree Sparrow and Lapwing breeding, has also added significantly to that part of the catch. However, that doesn’t explain that our number of non-pulli ringed was over 100 more than last May, from 47 species, compared to 39 species last May.
The pullus ringing has been phenomenal. As well as the Blue and Great Tits have done, Jonny has managed to ring a spectacular 21 Lapwing chicks, compared with 5 last May. The 10 retraps are this year’s birds picked up as a part of the ongoing species monitoring. In addition to that, he got to ring his first ever Stone-curlew chick. This is good news for two reasons: a great addition to his list but, also, this was not on Salisbury Plain but a long way east of the Plain. I am keeping the location confidential because it is so special. I am aware that the RSPB reserve on Winterbourne Downs were hoping for them to breed there this year: at least, that was their excuse for refusing me access to ring there, so perhaps they are beginning to spread out from the Plain.
However, I strongly suspect Jonny’s bird of the month was this:

This species is specially protected and needs a schedule 1 licence to monitor and ring the birds, which Jonny has for Lapwing, Stone-Curlew, Little Ringed Plover and Barn Owl. This is at Langford Lakes. Last year they tried to breed but the nest got flooded out. This year the site was managed, the nest protected from potential predators and this was the result: two Little Ringed Plover chicks ringed. Let’s hope they survive! The last time that any chicks of this species were ringed by someone in the group, as it was then configured, was in 2003 in the gravel pits near Ashton Keynes. Fabulous bird, and increasingly uncommon.
After last year’s disaster with Barn Owls, this year the recovery is phenomenal: actually it is better than that. We don’t usually ring many pulli in May. In fact, prior to this May we had ringed actually only ringed 5 in May: in 2024. This month we ringed 62 of them: 43 in the Braydon Forest area and 19 in the Chippenham / Lyneham area. What is rather remarkable is that the 43 we have ringed in the Braydon Forest area have come from just 8 boxes. Of the boxes we have checked, the four at Upper Waterhay have all drawn a blank, except for one that had a brood of Jackdaws, whereas within the Forest only two had no sign of activity, one because somehow its front door had been ripped off, two were clearly being used as roosting sites, and one had a brood of Jackdaws in it. We didn’t actually ring all of the chicks we found first time round, as some were too small. However, we ringed three broods of 7, two of which had an eighth chick which was too small to ring, two broods of 6, one of which had a chick too small to ring, then one brood of four and two broods of three. We have never had a brood of 8 before so to have three broods with that many chicks is remarkable for us. To put this into more perspective: the most we have ever ringed in a single year before was 33, in 2024, With them breeding so early this year I would not be surprised to find that we get second broods as well.
This is the list for the month:

So, increases across the board: an excellent number of species processed . I cannot remember a month when we have processed 50 species.
Added to the list this year are: Bullfinch, Canada Goose gosling, Carrion Crow, Coal Tit, Grey Wagtail, Linnet, Little Ringed Plover, Magpie, Nuthatch, Sparrowhawk and Tawny Owl pulli. The only species missing from the list this year was Collared Dove.
One final anecdote: the Carrion Crow was ringed by Jonny. On his way along the A338, near East Grafton, he noticed a Carrion Crow sat at the side of the road begging for food. He stopped to see if it was okay, and it begged at him for food. Instead he gave it a ring and then carried it across the road to where the parents were foraging and left it in a safe place still calling to be fed! It is only the sixth wild caught Carrion Crow the group has ever ringed or, to put it another way, it is the fifth wild caught Carrion Crow Jonny has ever ringed within the group, and I did the other, back in 2014 (I don’t count the two I did in Oak & Furrows rehab centre).
You can see all of the numbers for yourselves.
I am definitely interested to see how June shapes up.






















