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Rare owl rescued from Glossop back garden miles from home
Rare owl rescued from Glossop back garden miles from home

BBC News

time13-07-2025

  • General
  • BBC News

Rare owl rescued from Glossop back garden miles from home

A stricken short-eared owl has been recovered from a back garden in Derbyshire miles away from its moorland habitat. Wildlife photographer and falconer Oliver Booth was called by a friend when the juvenile was discovered on the ground in Glossop, unable to to Mr Booth, the bird of prey "shouldn't have been anywhere near the town", which he said was far from the species' usual breeding place. The bird was taken to a vet where it is expected to make a full recovery. Mr Booth, from Glossop, said although wildlife photography was not his full-time job, he was known in the town for his bird-related expertise and received a call on Friday requesting his owls are considered a rare species in the Booth, who has a bird hide in the town, said he was "surprised" the young owl came to be there."Short-eared owls live in moorland across the Peak District," the 45-year-old to The Wildlife Trusts charity, short-ears in the UK usually breed in Scotland and the north of England and would typically be seen in Booth believed the juvenile owl became lost in the night before becoming injured. He picked up the bird, and with the help of a bird ringer, got it to the vet. The bird had burst air sacs and a destabilised coracoid - a bone essential for a bird's flight - but "should make a full recovery", said Mr Booth.

Horrified Springwatch viewers rage 'give us a warning next time!' after 'hideous' cannibalism scenes that 'shouldn't be shown' see owl 'pulled apart and eaten alive'
Horrified Springwatch viewers rage 'give us a warning next time!' after 'hideous' cannibalism scenes that 'shouldn't be shown' see owl 'pulled apart and eaten alive'

Daily Mail​

time04-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Horrified Springwatch viewers rage 'give us a warning next time!' after 'hideous' cannibalism scenes that 'shouldn't be shown' see owl 'pulled apart and eaten alive'

Horrified Springwatch viewers raged after 'hideous'cannibalism scenes saw an animal 'pulled apart and eaten alive on Tuesday's episode of the BBC show. The latest instalment of the programme saw Chris Packham, 64, and Michaela Strachan, 59, return to National Trust 's Longshaw Estate in the Peak District to give fans an update on a short-eared owl family. The pair introduced the grassland species and their nest during the first week of the brand new series. Chris explained: 'Last week we introduced short-eared owl's nest that we had found, the first time we've shown you these birds live on Springwatch. 'Absolutely beautiful. There were six youngsters in the nest, but they started to disperse pretty much straightaway. 'We kept an eye on them and last night there were only two left in the nest area, although they were scuttling out and back again.' From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. They then shared a clip of them doing so, with Chris explaining: 'Here they were yesterday, coming back into that nest. The other four that we know are there have spread out into the Heather. It's a way of avoiding predators. '[The] largest chick was screaming a lot, it was hungry, the adults delivered because they brought in two voles and then a pipit, which they had captured. 'Things is, it was only the large chick that was getting the food, it ate the two voles and swallowed the pipit hole.' He explained that they ended up bringing more food back, but the larger chick stole it. Michaela added: 'You may remember yesterday when we showed you the six chicks, there's a big size differences between the youngest and oldest one. 'They hatch at intervals, so the younger might be more than a week younger than the oldest chick in the nest, and very often if there's not enough pretty to go around, the younger one will perish. 'That is usually when they are very little. It seemed like they were all being fed and just yesterday I said that one was doing really well, but I'm afraid in that nest, things took a turn for the worse. 'And it really surprised us. It is a little bit shocking.' Springwatch then played the footage of the chick eating its sibling, with Michaela adding: 'As you can see, that little one became weak and defenseless and the stronger sibling took complete advantage. 'It started pecking at the younger one which was still alive and I'm really sorry to say, I know it's hard to watch... but it pecked it to death. 'That was really surprising for us. 'As Chris said, they were fed four times, the little one could have taken some of that food, the bigger one took it, plenty of prey around, they were branching out, old enough to survive. We thought all of them were going to survive. 'But very sadly as you can see, that younger one didn't. It died. The older one made the most of it. It got rid of its sibling and it was very very hard to watch.' Those watching at home were in absolute shock at the scenes they were viewing and rushed to X, formerly known as Twitter, to discuss. 'Just let the kids to watch some nice relaxing #Springwatch before bed... Oh. Owl cannibalism.' 'Really don't think they should have shown the owl being eaten alive #Springwatch.' 'Baby owl eating its sibling alive ffs. Give us a 5 minute warning next time.' 'Got to love #Springwatch. Just watched my first 5 minutes of this series and I've already seen one short eared owl chick peck a sibling to death and eat it's cadaver.' 'Jeeze could have done without being shown that older owl chick pecking its fellow younger chick to death. It's different it dying and then being eaten but to be eaten alive is horrible.' 'Owl carnage... #springwatch So I think let's switch off from the doom and gloom at #swfc and decide to watch a bit of #springwatch to calm me down and what do I see, a baby owl eat it's sibling and another dead baby owl fed to it's siblings! Give us Owls a break.' 'Ffs that was didn't die and get eaten, it was pulled apart alive poor thing.'

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