Ospreys (Pandion
haliaetus)
Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons
The ospreys are returning to their UK nesting sites.
Rutland, Poole, Dyfi, Loch Doon, Foulshaw Moss, and others have all recorded ospreys arriving. Some still await their mates, while others are already mating. Some nests are currently unoccupied, as in Loch Arkaig, but this might change in the next few days.
For those who follow the birds, it can be an anxious time, wondering if the ones they watched in 2025, and often in years before, will return this year. Then there are the weeks of watching and waiting and hoping that breeding will be successful and the young birds will survive.
Eggs and baby birds are at risk from predators like the white-tailed eagle, large owls and corvids, and pine martens. Older, stronger siblings will often bully younger chicks, not allowing them to feed. The weather can also be a factor. Driving rain and fierce winds can chill eggs or chicks quickly, particularly if both parents are hunting for food. Sometimes, one of the parents dies, and it is extremely difficult for the surviving bird to source enough food for the chicks and itself. Exhaustion can be deadly.
Rutland Water ospreys at Manton Bay have been successful for thirty years, raising multiple broods of three and four. Ospreys in other locations often struggle to bring one chick to maturity.
They are stunning birds and there are a number of videos on YouTube – just make sure you get the birds and not the Welsh rugby team in Swansea!
Historically, ospreys have been known as sea hawks, river hawks, or fish hawks. They became extinct in Britain in 1916, but careful reintroduction has seen them increase from two breeding pairs in 1967 to over three hundred pairs in the twenty-first century.
Ospreys remain
rarer than golden eagles in the UK.

Ospreys are a fantastic bird to to watch. Their dive for a fish is spectacular.
ReplyDeleteIt is astonishing.
DeleteWe see ospreys at the NJ shore, fishing for quite large fish, which they organize facing front, the fish, because that's aerodynamically frugal. They're brilliant. Now and then we see one over a local lake and they nest here inland, too.
ReplyDeleteCarrying a large, wriggling fish in the talons of one foot is an amazing feat of strength.
DeleteOspreys are rare in my area
ReplyDeleteCompletely absent in mine.
DeleteThey are now returning to my area for the season. I saw one fly over Asylum Lake late last week - I was so excited!
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful experience.
DeleteExhaustion and starvation can indeed be deadly. But how can protection be built in? No cage would be large enough!
ReplyDeleteIt's the law of Nature, and must be accepted.
DeleteI love Ospreys but don't see any around my area. I have seen some on Rottnest Island when I visited a long time ago. Nature is so harsh when it comes to birds and survival. I am glad you have them returning again.
ReplyDeleteNature is harsh and uncompromising.
DeleteI will never not be amazed by our various flying dinosaurs.
ReplyDeleteI agree.
DeleteWonderful!
ReplyDeleteI don't think they live here, but again, they are mentioned in the book I have told you about in my comment on your previous post.
I found this:
Delete"Ospreys in Germany have made a significant recovery, with around 500 breeding pairs, primarily in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and Brandenburg. Due to a lack of tall, mature trees, about 75% of German ospreys nest on artificial platforms on high-voltage power pylons, which often results in higher breeding success."
I'm at the opposite end of Germany from the breeding areas mentioned, so it's not surprising that I have never seen one.
DeleteI didn't know ospreys and sea hawks are the same bird. We have seahawks here and I think they are quite plentiful. Yes, seahawk alone brought up a variety of sports plus a helicopter.
ReplyDelete😂🤣
DeleteA hopeful yet fragile season unfolds as osprey return to Britain’s skies, their ancient journey carrying both the promise of new life and the quiet uncertainty of survival.
ReplyDeleteIt can be heartbreaking for onlookers to see tragedy unfold, but that is Nature.
DeleteI've never seen one around here. I ca n imagine it would be an exciting time waiting for their return every year
ReplyDeleteThere are communities of 'watchers' and they get very caught up in the whole process.
DeleteI saw them at Rutland a few years ago on a visit to Britain. Here they have recovered spectacularly since the dark days of organochlorine pesticides and are quite common. The closest breeding pair to me is not more than five minutes from home.
ReplyDeleteTo have them just five minutes away would be such a gift. There are none near me.
DeleteWe have them and their nests in our general area, but not very near our particular town afaik.
ReplyDelete😊
DeleteI was excited last week to see that our male Osprey has returned to the nest. He is impatiently holding down the fort while he waits for the girl to return.
ReplyDeleteExciting. You have a ringside seat - almost!
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ReplyDeleteIt's amazing how birds return to the same spots every year!
ReplyDeleteand to the same mates!
DeleteI live by the Chesapeake Bay (largest estuary in the US) and ospreys are fairly common here. Bald eagles, too. Always on the lookout for them. A number of webcams are set up in locations the birds are known to nest. Fun to see when babies are born and watch as they fledge.
ReplyDeleteWhen I stayed on a loch in the Scottish Highlands this past October, I tried to keep my eye out for sea eagles.
It seems that we never see what we're watching for and are surprised by the things we don't expect to see.
DeleteWonderful photo. We have an Osprey nest not too far from my house. It's always fun to watch the fledglings.
ReplyDeleteYou are privileged. 😊
DeleteI've been hearing ospreys this week (although, not outside today due to weather) while sitting in my backyard . I live near water and perhaps that's why. I've seen them in the air and high up on a tree but have never seen one where I could really view them. We sometimes see bald eagles, and my husband believes he once saw a golden eagle.during spring migration (they are endangered where I live)., I wasn't aware you had them in your part of the world so thank you for the education!
ReplyDeleteThey have quite a following. Watchers anxiously await their return from North Africa in March and early April.
DeleteMagnificent
ReplyDeleteThey are impressive birds.
DeleteWhat fascinating birds!
ReplyDeleteThey are attentive partners and parents and stay together to raise a brood, but then separate and lead independent lives until the next breeding season.
DeleteI didn't even realize there ARE ospreys in the UK. We have lots of them in Florida -- presumably the same species?
ReplyDeleteThey are the same species, but I think Florida ospreys are year-round residents. UK Ospreys return to GB from North Africa in the spring and then fly away again in September, so we only see them for six months.
DeleteThey are such nice looking birds. Happy First Day of April.
ReplyDeleteI think so, too.
DeleteSuch magnificent birds.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
I agree.
DeleteWe have many of these awesome birds, yours have a little more black than ours. it odd, but Bob's PT is here and I showed him the photo on your blog and he started telling me about the osprey nests next to his kids school, a half dozen of them. we have them in our parks and beaches. their nest are huge and the babies are so cute
ReplyDeleteThat's wonderful. Ospreys are only in UK for six months of the year.
ReplyDeleteI've always been intrigued by these quirky birds. Ours are only seasonal too but I remember well seeing the almost-somewhat "famous" osprey nest that we could see from our law office when I was in practice. It struck me as bizarre since it was right downtown. (Granted "downtown" isn't anything remotely "large" but still, not where I'd build a nest.)
ReplyDeleteThat does seem strange, but there must have been a body of water nearby, since their diet is almost entirely fish.
ReplyDelete