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In the field with Gary

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‘For twenty-five years, the Hawk Conservancy Trust has worked on and supported a long-term ringing project for African White-backed Vultures in South Africa. Supported by De Beers and working with local partners the Endangered Wildlife Trust and BirdLife South Africa, plus other partners including Gauntlet Conservation Trust and Puy du Fou, Trust team members spend two weeks each breeding season ringing chicks. With former lead and Head of Development at the Trust Andy Hinton now retired, this season Patrick King and I represented the Trust.

The main focus is across De Beers’ Dronfield Reserve, an area with one of the biggest and most important breeding colonies of Critically Endangered African White-backed Vultures. Each morning, the team are usually up at the crack of dawn, where we meet for a briefing with Project Leader Angus Anthony on where the nests are located that we will be checking that day. The nests are mapped out following checks carried out by Angus earlier in the season, establishing if they are likely to be used by a pair for rearing their young. A plan is made and then we’re all jumping into the vehicles and heading out into the wild!

As we approach a potential nesting tree, there’s a few key signs we look for to see if the nest is being used. A key sign is parents sitting on the nest, that usually fly off as our vehicles pull up, circling overhead or keeping watch from a neighbouring tree. We also check for signs of life, like feathers on the ground or a ‘white-wash’ of vulture poo in the branches – these are usually signs someone is home.

If it all looks viable, it’s time to split up. The tree team’s job involves securing a ladder, climbing the tree and popping the young vulture into a basket which is then winched down to the ground team. This team then carry out a general health check on the chick, take its measurements, and fit them with an identification leg ring. The chick is then lifted back into the nest before we pack down and move to the next nest, repeating the process until we start to lose the light. The team aim to visit around twenty nests a day, before heading back to camp for a good wash ready to begin the process all over again at first light.

Each nest visit takes around 15-20 minutes, where the parents are often sitting close by, waiting to come back as you start driving away. It’s always nice to see them flying back to the nest as we drive off to the next nesting site. From all the nests we checked, most of the chicks we ringed were around 6-11 weeks old. At this point they’re mostly fully grown, with lots of feathers and nearly ready to leave the nest. Happily, most looked fairly healthy. With no rhinos on this reserve, the risk of carcasses being poisoned is a lot less. We did happen to see a few carcasses on our drives, with many vultures feasting there. This was a real positive. Luckily, we only came across one deceased chick – about eight weeks old, with no real clear reason as to what had happened.

One of the moments that really stood out to me on this trip was visiting a nest with a very young chick in it. Most chicks are at a feisty age and let you know they’d rather be staying put in their comfy nest! But this one was a real tiny youngster, probably only a week or two old. It was small enough to fit in your cupped hands, and a real fluff-ball! It was absolutely gorgeous, and everyone gathered round to coo and have a look.

You can usually tell when approaching a tree whether it’s an active nest from those signs of life. If you pull up and the parents don’t fly off until the very last minute, sometimes it indicates they are sitting on an egg, or even a very young chick that is only a few days old and still heavily reliant on the parents. If this is the case, we’ll give the nest site a scan using a camera attached to the end of a very long extendable pole to check on how it’s getting on. If it’s too small to ring, we’ll leave it be.

This data is all still recorded, as well as other sightings of nests, wildlife and activity we see on our drives across the savannah.

As we were in the area, which is in the middle of nowhere, we also checked in on a Secretary Bird nest that had been recorded as potentially active earlier in the season. Amazingly, the nest had three beautiful chicks in it! We saw lots of other birds of prey, including a Secretary Bird actually hunting using the iconic kick we’ve all come to love, and one bobbing its head down into the grasses to feast on insects. On one drive we spotted a Martial Eagle surveying its surroundings from a telegraph pole, and we even saw a pair of Lanner Falcons hunting together – a male and female picking off their next meal from a group of Starlings.

As you’re driving through these immense and massive environments, you do get to see so much. We saw herds of giraffe, packs of lions, African Wild Dogs, Spotted Hyenas and more. What wewere constantly warned of, was that we were   surrounded by things that do want to eat you! Whether it’s thorny plants, spikey bushes, or animals looking for their next meal. We were interrupted during one nest check by a herd of Buffalo, from which we quickly jumped back into the vehicles for cover. One nest tree even had a Sociable Weaver Bird nest with an unwanted visitor – a Boomslang! The most venomous snake in all of Africa, which quickly slithered into the tree branches and watched us as we worked.

As well as the actual monitoring work we are doing, there is also a huge emphasis on education. We chat to the farmers whose land borders the reserves, engaging in ways they can protect their land and livestock without needing to poison carcasses that might affect the vultures. Last year we held a talk at a local school on vulture conservation and why it’s so important – and sitting in that classroom watching the next generation learn to love and appreciate vultures as much as we do was a truly touching moment that really felt full circle.

It’s been a privilege to be a part of this long-standing project. Every nest reached, every chick counted, and every conversation with a farmer adds up to something bigger—a future where these important birds still fly high above. Being a part of this conservation work, even for a short time, is a humbling reminder of why what we do matters and why we must keep fighting for the species that cannot speak for themselves.

 

 

The winner of the 2025 Marion Paviour Award!

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We are very excited to announce our 2025 Marion Paviour Award winner – Samik Bista!

Samik’s work will be on the stunning Steppe Eagle. These Endangered eagles get their name from their preferred breeding habitat – the steppes of Central Asia. While the current estimate for their global population stands at just over 31,000 pairs and around 94,000 individuals in total, this is based on studies from 2015 and 2016, and there may well be fewer now as their population trend is declining.

Alarmingly, a study in 2014 showed that Steppe Eagles are also impacted by exposure to diclofenac (a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) used to treat livestock) in the same way that many vultures in South Asia are and have been – a major conservation concern that we have worked on for many years. The use of these toxic NSAIDs have resulted in an unprecedented decline in vulture population numbers in South Asia. This serves to underline the importance of our work with our partners in Asia to help remove toxic NSAIDs from the market but also the need for wider collaborations and work on different species, such as with our Marion Paviour Award winners, to try and best conserve and protect as many birds of prey as possible.

Samik’s work will take place in Nepal, where a considerable amount of work to ban NSAIDs and make the environment safer for birds of prey has already happened and is yielding positive results for vulture populations. Threats to vultures and other birds of prey still exist here nonetheless, and Samik’s work will look at how to address some of these and encourage long-term and sustainable protection of these birds through engaging communities in this work.

Hear from Samik below as he introduces himself and his project and what winning the Hawk Conservancy Trust’s Marion Paviour Award means to him.

“My name is Samik Bista, and I am leading a project titled “Breaking Barriers to Steppe Eagle Conservation through Research, Education, and Community Action in Hetauda, Central Nepal.” The Steppe Eagle, listed as Endangered on the IUCN Red List, is experiencing rapid population decline from threats including habitat loss, persecution, and collisions with powerlines. Despite regular winter sightings in Hetauda, very little is known about what habitat they are using and what local threats they face. Through systematic surveys and community engagement, this project aims to generate vital data, identify key habitats, and inspire local stewardship for Steppe Eagle conservation.

The Marion Paviour Award will be transformative in enabling both research and community action. It will directly support our field surveys, awareness campaigns, and capacity-building programs, allowing us to train local birdwatchers and students as ‘Steppe Eagle Guardians.’ Beyond funding, this award provides recognition and encouragement that strengthens my commitment to raptor research and conservation. It will help me develop advanced field, analytical, and leadership skills essential for my long-term goal of becoming a conservation biologist dedicated to protecting birds of prey and promoting community-based wildlife conservation across Nepal.”

Come along to the Trust to see Stilton, our Steppe Eagle, as he showcases these stunning birds, helping raise awareness about the species and the realities the wild population faces.

Our year conserving birds of prey

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With your dedicated support, our 60th Anniversary year has been one of our biggest yet. From helping us approach one of our most ambitious fundraising targets ever to massive steps forward in our conservation work, you’ve helped us fly in our mission of conserving birds of prey and their habitats. As this monumental year draws to a close, we’re reflecting on what we’ve achieved with your help, and looking ahead to what 2026 holds.

 

Lappet-faced Vulture

This year has seen us realise an exciting development in our conservation work – the launch of our very first ’tree-safe installations‘ to protect Lappet-faced Vulture nest trees from elephant damage! The money raised in our Team Challenge fundraising from last year has been essential in progressing our efforts with practical interventions. This represents a major step forward for the project, moving from years of monitoring to actively testing a hands-on intervention strategy.

Elephant activity poses a serious threat to the vital breeding population of Lappet-faced Vultures in Kruger National Park, with many nesting trees being pushed over and lost. To tackle this, we are implementing a protection method built on a traditional strategy – installing large concrete blocks in a ring around the base of the nesting trees. These blocks are pointed and act as a physical deterrent, preventing elephants from reaching the trunks while leaving other wildlife and the surrounding habitat unaffected – key criteria for the mitigation strategy.

Each installation is a huge effort, taking around 2,000 concrete blocks per tree, plus significant logistical work to transport and install them deep within the bushveld of Kruger National Park. Despite the challenges, the design meets our goals perfectly as it is durable, low-maintenance, and minimally invasive.

We are starting with a pilot phase that will protect and monitor six trees, and assessing the effectiveness of this approach before expanding to safeguard more nesting trees in the future upon success of the pilot. It is a bold and practical step toward securing the future of South Africa’s Lappet-faced Vultures.

 

Central Asian Vulture Project

Fieldwork this year included five successful congregation counts in Uzbekistan and one in Tajikistan, as well as the identification of some more nesting grounds. These provide valuable data towards one of the main objectives: estimating the size of the Egyptian Vulture population in the region.

We also expanded fieldwork into Kyrgyzstan for the first time, meaning birds have now been tagged in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan for this project. This year saw three juvenile Egyptian Vultures tagged in Uzbekistan and two in Kyrgyzstan, while project partners in Kazakhstan added a further four birds. Despite these positive steps, we have also seen several tags lose signal in the second half of the year, with a number of these confirmed as mortalities. While this is always upsetting to see, the loss is not in vain because it is providing incredibly important information on survival rates and threats that face this migrating population. As we continue to track more birds, this information will build up to provide an incredibly valuable picture that can underpin practical conservation strategy and efforts.

 

Pakistan Vulture Recovery Project

The PVRP project had a productive year in the community despite some significant challenges. The establishment of three Nature Clubs in three schools in District Kotli in Azad Jammu and Kashmir was a key achievement. Awareness sessions with the students aimed to increase their knowledge and sensitivity to the importance and ecological role of vultures in the ecosystem, the threats these birds face, and the role students and local communities can play to protect vultures.

The project has also received some funding to enhance its national-level advocacy efforts, which aim to strengthen regulations and promote a ban on vulture-toxic veterinary drugs, specifically aceclofenac, ketoprofen, and flunixin, in Pakistan. Pakistan, thus far, has lagged behind other countries in the region in banning additional vulture-toxic NSAIDs. This new work represents a crucial step toward accelerating progress in this area. The project ultimately seeks to use targeted, evidence-based advocacy efforts to secure a nationwide ban on these harmful drugs.

Breeding in Changa Manga continues successfully, with two more White-rumped Vulture chicks successfully fledging at the breeding centre this season. The breeding centre now houses a total of 33 White-rumped Vultures, with all vultures in good health and feeding well.

 

Kestrel Conservation Monitoring

This year, our Team Challenge fundraising has supported our Kestrel Monitoring Conservation work, and it has been an exciting year of progress! We have launched a brand new phase of research – tracking adult nesting Kestrels. This is the first time such movement data has ever been collected in the UK, marking a major step forward in understanding these incredible birds and the reasons behind their decline in many parts of the country.

So, what exactly are we hoping to gain from the data?

The main aim of tagging adult nesting Kestrels is to find out which habitats and areas Kestrels prefer to use when raising their young. There are many factors involved and plenty of questions we expect to explore, but our key focus is on understanding how changes to the landscape, and especially those brought about by different environmental schemes, affect how Kestrels use these areas. By identifying where Kestrels concentrate their hunting across a landscape, we hope to measure how different habitat features influence their hunting success – and by extension nesting success – and once we know that, work to increase the amount of habitat that is most beneficial.

Working out how a species like the Kestrel uses its habitat is not easy though. One option is direct observation by fieldworkers, but this takes a lot of time, focus, and usually several fieldworkers, since the birds often move out of sight as they leave the nest area. Electronic tracking offers an exciting alternative, allowing us to gather detailed data with much less time in the field, and it means we can study more birds throughout the breeding season.

We have developed a safe remote system to capture the adult Kestrels in order to be able to tag them. The trackers equate to about 2% of the average weight of the lightest Kestrel. With many other birds, tags are fitted to their central tail feathers but this is not appropriate for Kestrels because of their tendency to hover during hunting, and it is likely the tags would impact their ability to do this efficiently. As such, we used a backpack harness attachment instead.

We aim to tag 20 Kestrels with satellite trackers, starting this year by successfully tagging three adult Kestrels (two females and one male) after developing our strategy and navigating some challenges in the field. We will continue to gather more data before completing a full analysis and drawing any firm conclusions but initial inspection of early patterns shows that the majority of time is spent relatively close to the nest site, with occasional trips further away.

Next year we will activate more tags and collect a lot more data. With this information, alongside data on their population numbers, where they nest, and how many chicks they raise from our raptor transects and Raptor Nest Box Project, we will have built quite a comprehensive picture of Kestrel lives in southern England. This can underpin the development of robust practical conservation solutions for them.

Here’s to a fantastic year continuing our work to conserve birds of prey in 2026!

©2025 Hawk Conservancy Trust