Third osprey chick hatches in nest on Scottish wildlife reserve ALL three osprey chicks have now hatched in their nest at a wildlife reserve in Perth and Kinross. The third chick emerged at around 6pm on Saturday at the Scottish Wildlife Trust’s Loch of the Lowes Wildlife Reserve. It joined its older siblings, which hatched on Tuesday and Thursday. This season is the second as a breeding pair for female osprey NCO and male osprey LM12 after they successfully fledged one chick last year. Sara Rasmussen, Perthshire ranger with the Scottish Wildlife Trust, said: “We were thrilled to see the chick burst out of its shell.
All three osprey chicks have now hatched in their nest at a wildlife reserve in Perth and Kinross.
The third chick emerged at around 6pm on Saturday May 22 at the Scottish Wildlife Trust’s Loch of the Lowes Wildlife Reserve.
It joined its older siblings, which hatched on Tuesday and Thursday.
This season is the second as a breeding pair for female osprey NCO and male osprey LM12 after they successfully fledged one chick last year.
In case you missed it, here s our final chick of the season making a break for it at around 6pm last night! pic.twitter.com/otiOY0FpT8
Summer school centred on the circular economy is being offered by the Ellen Macarthur Foundation. BURSARIES are available for five Island-based state school students who want to take part in a residential course to learn about the circular economy. The one week programme, set on the Isle of Wight, has been created by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, experts in the circular economy, in conjunction with Leadership in Global Change and Ryde School. Workshops will be focused on discovering new ways to design, make, and use things that are better for people and the planet. Students will discover how applying circular economy principles can eliminate waste and pollution, keep products and materials circulating, and restore and improve our natural environment.