Main content
Sorry, this episode is not currently available

Episode 11

Live from the heart of the Cotswolds Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, Chris Packham and Michaela Strachan share the news from the wildlife cameras over the past 24 hours.

Live from the heart of the Cotswolds Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, Chris Packham and Michaela Strachan share the news from the wildlife cameras over the past 24 hours, checking in on the robin, blackcap, chaffinch and reed bunting nests, as well as seeing how the sickly great tit chick is faring.

Patrick Aryee gets involved with a brand new piece of science from the RSPB, who are trying to work out why starlings are in such steep decline, and Lucy Cooke tries to follow the feeding routes used by the lesser horseshoe bats.

Gillian Burke is in Glasgow to meet an unlikely urban resident - water voles that are living miles from the nearest water source, right in the heart of the city.

There is a two-part film following the fate of a family of eider ducks on the Isle of May, and a report on the health of Major Oak - the tree that Robin Hood allegedly used as a hideaway - and that is in poor health due to the tourists that flock to see it.

There is an update on the long-eared owls in Wales, where our cameraman also caught some other nocturnal creatures that hunt alongside them including the little-known nightjar.

1 hour

Last on

Wed 13 Jun 2018 20:00

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Chris Packham
Presenter Michaela Strachan
Presenter Gillian Burke
Presenter Lucy Cooke
Presenter Patrick Aryee
Director Tony Grech-Smith
Producer Jake Senior
Editor Amy Fathers
Editor Helen Stenner
Editor Vicky Jordan
Executive Producer Rosemary Edwards

Broadcast

Download your FREE ‘Wildlife Watch’ poster and find out about the OU’s citizen science mission ‘Springtime Renewal’

‘Springtime Renewal’ with the OU

Explore some simple but powerful ways to make a positive impact on nature and the environment with The Open University

What can you do to help nature and the environment?