Blogs
9/5/2023 in: GWCT News Blog under: Letters , Action for Curlew , Waders , GWCT in the media
The Daily Telegraph recently reported that the RSPB is seeking contractors to undertake predation management as part of their efforts to protect curlews in Northern Ireland.
5/5/2023 in: GWCT News Blog under: GWCT Wales
Please join us in Wales for some exciting events throughout May. Feel free to invite your friends, non-members are always more than welcome. Be quick though - places are limited!
5/5/2023 in: GWCT News Blog under: GWCT Partners
On 5 and 6 July 2023, ADA, the association for flood and water management authorities throughout the UK, are hosting a unique working demonstration and exhibition highlighting innovations in sustainable water management and flood resilience.
4/5/2023 in: GWCT News Blog under: GWCT Partners
The Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust is very proud of its association with the Purdey Awards. The link between conservation and shooting that the awards highlight is precisely what GWCT is all about – conservation through wise use.
4/5/2023 in: GWCT News Blog under: Hen harrier/Grouse shooting
The abandonment of heather management in the Peak District National Park threatens rare birds and peatlands‚ as evidenced in a ground-breaking new report on the growing risk of catastrophic wildfire.
3/5/2023 in: GWCT News Blog under: GWCT Partners
JM Osborne Rural and Sporting have been involved in shoots and shooting in one form or another since 1972 and have seen a massive change in that near 50 year period.
3/5/2023 in: GWCT News Blog under: Advice
It is easy to think that urban foxes are a new phenomenon, but records of foxes in towns go back to the 1890s in Switzerland, and the 1930s in London. There are lots of urban folk who love to have foxes about, but those who don’t often ask why they don’t go back to the countryside, “where they belong”. But what brought them into town in the first place?
2/5/2023 in: GWCT News Blog under: GWCT Partners , Nature
In April 2023, the Lowland Gamebird research group finished a full year of walking 3km transect routes across a number of sites every three weeks, looking for fox scats and recording wildlife sightings.