Twite at Hauxley. Image by Tom Marshall.
Since the 1980s, volunteers have recorded the number of visiting birds every day to add to a very comprehensive list.
In 2025, a total of 157 different species of bird visited the reserve, compared to 155 in 2024 and 167 in 2023.
Species last year ranged from many that people may know such as rooks, song thrushes, and blue tits to the lesser-known types such as velvet scoters, white-billed divers, American wigeons, ring ouzels, little orks and twites (members of the finch family).
A white-tailed eagle was also spotted flying over the reserve on numerous occasions but didn’t touch down.
So far, fifty different species have been recorded during the first two weeks of January.
The great news is that, despite tree sparrows being classified in the UK as Red under the Birds of Conservation Concern 5: the Red List for Birds (2021), all the Trust’s Druridge Bay reserves still have the best populations of them in the north east, with Hauxley being one of the easiest places to see them - either around the reserve or fluttering onto the bird feeders in the trees next to the car park.
Alex Lister, Northumberland Wildlife Trust Druridge Bay Landscapes Manager says:
“Without the efforts of the Hauxley volunteers who record the bird sightings every day of the year and in all weathers, our knowledge would not be as vast as it is. But don’t take our word for it, come and see them for yourself.
““The appearance of so many birds and indeed mammals on the reserve reinforce the Trust’s constant message that if you provide a safe haven for wildlife, it will thrive. Wildlife is easily disturbed by both humans and dogs, which is why we insist that dog owners must not allow their animals to run around unsupervised on this, or any other of our reserves.”