The Newton road rookery now has 4 nests opposite lowton community cafe with the fourth a new nest in early stages of construction. There are now 3 nests opposite the primary school a bit further down with 2 new nests since mid Feb with one in early stages of construction. So far 7 nests in total at this rookery compared to 3 last year.
A new site. Mottram Road, Hyde, opposite Morrison's. 3 nests in 2 trees. Remnants of another nest may be a new nest starting but possibly an old Magpie's.
Replying to Dave' s post regarding the rookery at Newton road opposite the community cafe. It is a new site which I noticed last year with 3 nests in one sycmore.
They have been rebuilding since early Feb this year and there is now a new nest in an Ash nearby opposite school so 4 nests. It also looked like a 5th might be being built.
Yes , great to watch and to listen to the wonderful conversations . Birtle rookery off to tentative start with four , embryonic nests . Or is it three ? Amazin how difficult it is to count them .
That time of year when rookeries are awesome to watch. This weekend at St Johns Church, Mosley Common four nests are mostly built now, with the beginnings of a fifth. Of the four large nests, three are very close to each other in one tree. No idea whether that is because its the optimum tree for forks to build in, or whether the birds involved are closely related, or just best mates!!! One of those three nests was the only one to survive the winter storms. Today there was quite a bit of communal aerial display/interaction going on. Fascinating stuff.
In Lowton on Friday there were three nests under construction in roadside trees at the front of Lowton Primary School and Lowton Community Hub. Personally I hadnt seen any there before. Dont know for sure whether its a new site or if I have just missed them before. There were several nests very close to there in a garden last year.
-- Edited by dave broome on Sunday 1st of March 2026 08:06:09 PM
Rook feeding on sports field Lowton Common today. Seen one here on most visits recently which is unusual as just one and nearest rookery some distance away to my knowledge.
Birtle lower rookery . 21 nests , far fewer than last year 35 . Hope it is just a temporary blip . In reply to Oliver Morris , I have seen rookeries of five nests up to more than sixty and any amount between .
Seven nests so far at St Johns Church, Mosley Common. Only one nest survived the winter storms. It was still fairly large, in stark contrast to all the other nests from 2024, of which there was no trace. It would be interesting to know who claimed that nest for this year.
In Golborne a new site (as far as I know, fairly sure it is new) has been built this year in a single roadside tree at the front of Golborne High School. Three nests, which are presumably an outlier built by birds from the long-standing St Thomas Church rookery, which was reduced in numbers last year.
There is another small rookery in Lowton, new to me, though on a street I wouldnt normally have reason to go down. Located in a mature tree in a garden between Newton Road and Beech Avenue, it isnt very far as the Rook flies from the reduced site at St Thomas Church, Golborne. I wonder whether avian flu would have had any influence in disrupting rookeries? I havent had chance to stop and check properly, but I got the impression that the Holiday Inn rookery, just outside GM in to St Helens, nr the Haydock Racecourse is down on what it used to be, with a small outlier at the front of Edmund Arrowsmith High School, Ashton-in-Makerfield (initially one nest a few years ago) slightly increased.
Thirty five in lower rookery at Birtle . Highest number since it started about six years ago . Have not yet done a precise count of the higher rookery but seems to be seven .
Noticed last few years how, over the border in Calderdale, sadly, how many rookeries have disappeared and those that remain have generally reduced in size. Mind you around Whitefield and Haywood the same is true and no doubt about other areas on the edge of the city.
Plenty of activity over the last few days, between 20 and 26 nests look to be occupied or being rebuilt, lots of sticks being stolen and fought over, 44 individual birds counted but lots of coming and going so difficult to count.
Four nests so far at St Johns Church, Mosley Common, at various stages of construction (just the one nest over the weekend of 24th/25th Feb, one which had largely survived the winter storms). Six pairs were actually present this morning. One of the pairs without a nest were sat in the canopy while one intermittently preened the nape of the other. One of the highlights of the year is this burst of activity before the foliage appears. Elsewhere in Tyldesley nests are also under construction at the Elliott Street/Castle Street estate - initially appeared to be an outlier from the Tyldesley Cemetery rookery - a site which now seems to be abandoned.
-- Edited by dave broome on Thursday 7th of March 2024 06:41:25 AM
Yesterday much excitement and joy . Three nascent nests appeared in Birtle lower rookery and two a little further up the road , in a tree not used previously . Rejoice !
Birtle . Lower rookery 25 nests . Middle rookery 5 nests . Top rookery 25 nests . These started six years ago with the lower , then the top , then the middle . Distance between lower and top is about six hundred yards with the middle slightly nearer to the lower . Is this to be counted as one rookery ?
Back in March 2021 fredford noted that there were Jackdaws associating with Rooks at a local rookery. I have read that in Autumn Rooks perform a display called Stooping when they climb to great heights on thermals and then plunge vertically, obviously pulling out of the dive before they would hit the ground. They are accompanied on their ascent by Jackdaws that do not stoop but presumably go up just for kicks.
Birtle . Twenty-three nests in original place , started in 2013 , eighteen in the one four hundred yards to the east which was establihed one year later and this year there is an additional site between the two , with ten nests . Is this one rookery or three ?
Birtle . 23 nests , they have been busy . The annexe , quarter of a mile to the north east , has about seven nests. Most interesting and amusing to watch the rooks swinging on twigs to break them off . The former magpie nest has been requisitioned . There are always a good number of jackdaws with the rooks . Why is this ? Do they nest amongst the rooks ?