Second brood of osprey chicks hatch at Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve

Second brood of osprey chicks hatch at Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve

For the first time, there are two pairs of ospreys breeding at the South Lakes nature reserve
Image of osprey feeding fish to two small osprey chicks on nest

Two osprey chicks are doing well on the second osprey nest at Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve © Cumbria Wildlife Trust

Osprey chicks have hatched at not one, but two nests at Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve near Witherslack. 

The long-standing breeding pair, White YW and Blue 35, returned to the nest in March and laid three eggs, which hatched in May.

Soon after, a second pair of ospreys, Blue 476 and Blue 717, set up home at another nest on the nature reserve and laid three eggs. Three chicks hatched this week, but sadly one was lost. Osprey volunteers think there's a chance one was accidentally carried off the nest by the male, Blue 476. The camera showed he had a clump of nesting material caught in his talons. However, the two remaining chicks are looking strong and seem to be doing well.

Paul Waterhouse, Reserves Officer for Cumbria Wildlife Trust said: “It’s great news to have not just one but two families of osprey chicks at Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve! Blue 35 and White YW, our ‘regulars’, are quite mature now, so it’s good to have another younger pair starting to breed here - let’s hope they return in the future.

“Don’t forget, we have our live osprey cam trained on nest 1, so you can keep a close eye on the chicks throughout the breeding season, and follow us at #FoulshawOspreys to keep up with the latest news from both nests” 

Paul said that the second nest is quite close to the boardwalk and is vulnerable to disturbance, so asks visitors to be aware of this when they visit. We've built a hide nearby to view the new nest from: please use this hide respectfully, taking other visitors’ experiences into account.

The car park at Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve is quite small and gets full quickly. If you’re able to, please access it via public transport. More information about getting here. There are also bike racks.

If you do arrive by car and find that the car park is full, please return at a later time or date. The access road to the nature reserve is narrow and doesn’t have passing places, so please drive carefully and expect that you may need to reverse to help others pass.  

Blue 35 and White YW first came to Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve after we transformed it with a large-scale habitat restoration programme. Over a decade or so, the 900-acre site, which had been drained and used for commercial forestry, was returned to the healthy wetland you see now, which is teeming with wildlife.

Foulshaw Moss Nature Reserve is open daily, free of charge. It’s located off the A590 near Witherslack.

Use #FoulshawOspreys to join the osprey conversation on social.