There are lots of reasons why Monkwood is so special – it's blend of oak and wet woodlands (still very wet, even in June), the many different butterfly species that are found here and the flowery corridors that border the paths...not to mention the dormice, dragonflies, reptiles, great crested newts and so on! But it’s becoming increasingly important for our migrant birds too. Species like cuckoo, willow warbler and common whitethroat are in sharp decline across the UK but Monkwood still manages to attract a good number each year.
Spring for me is a checklist of hearing each different birdsong for the first time that year. It usually starts early when the first robins change from their slightly subdued, wistful winter song to something more energetic. Hearing a male blackbird in full flow on one of those spring evenings where you start to notice the day length increasing is balm for the soul. After a long winter, this is always the moment that fills me with joy. Then the floodgates open and there’s a flurry of firsts – first chiffchaff, first blackcap and first swallow. If I’m really lucky I might be able to tick off first redstart too, although I have to be in the right place at the right time.
For some time, willow warbler song was the alarm tone on my phone to turf me out of bed in the mornings. Despite that, it remains a favourite of mine and I love hearing their gentle cascading song. The loss of good breeding habitat is one of the major causes of their population decline in the UK as they rely on young woodland of particularly willow, alder and silver birch. The coppice plots and coppiced ride edges at Monkwood mimic these conditions and whilst most of the coppice is hazel, there are thickets of willow and alder that usually hold a singing willow warbler or two.