Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$149.99
 
$74.99/År

Prøve GULL - Gratis

Save the Easter Bunny

BBC Countryfile Magazine

|

April 2022

Baby rabbits nibbling at meadow edges make endearing scenes across lowland Britain, or they did until recent years. Our rabbit population is under threat – so much so that conservationists are building ‘hotels’ to protect the species, reports Amy-Jane Beer

- By Amy-Jane Beer. Photographs by Getty, Alamy and Picfair

Save the Easter Bunny

Our lane is bunny central. Arriving after dusk, you will almost always see between one and two dozen lolloping, furry forms in the space of 100 metres. They are regulars in the garden, and one morning I came down to my study to find a youngster camped under a bookcase.

Not everyone is a fan – farmers, foresters and horticulturists object to thievery – but at this time of year, only the stoniest heart can fail to soften at the sight of pompom babies (known as kits or kittens) relishing their first experience of sunshine: stubby ears pricked, noses twitching, eyes wide.

Not only are rabbits survivors and opportunists with complex societies and a famously fecund reproductive strategy evolved to counter heavy predation, but our countryside and culture would not be the same without them. Yet their numbers are dramatically down in many areas of the UK. Could they become a rare sight?

Our resident wild rabbits are not native, prehistoric populations having died out before Britain was islanded by rising seas. Rabbits were introduced more than once– first by the Romans, who kept them captive, and then in much greater numbers in the 12th century. Originally farmed on offshore islands or in enclosures known as warrens or coneygarths, they subsequently escaped or were released to populate the wider countryside. It seems they remained relatively scarce in the wild until the late 1700s, when intensification of agriculture created much easier conditions for them. By the early to mid-20th century, the population had become pestilential.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Fireworks still thrill, but it's time to embrace something less explosive

I love fireworks. Nature's blazing colours ceding to blazing fires, and acceptance - now the comforting melancholy of September and October has settled - that winter is in the wings. An excitement builds, towards the season of staying in and going out, heralded by sparks in the dark.

time to read

2 mins

November 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

In search of monsters

Britain is a land populated by dragons, giants, selkies and supernatural beings – or so the legends go. Kevin Parr meets Monsterland author Nicholas Jubber to hunt for otherworldly creatures

time to read

7 mins

November 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Get into geocaching

Geocaching is a fun, low-cost hobby that spans the generations. Whether you're a curious six-year-old or a grandparent with a sense of adventure, here's how to get started

time to read

3 mins

November 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

FUELLING THE FLAMES

Once a year, in a thrilling spectacle, the Devon town of Ottery St Mary is set aglow by flaming tar barrels carried through the streets.

time to read

3 mins

November 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

The big questions answered

\"If you want to track down royal resting places, you'll have your work cut out\"

time to read

13 mins

November 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

The king and I

It has its own king, a population of three and was once the landing place for an invasion of England. Dixe Wills ventures to England's most unusual tiny isle

time to read

7 mins

November 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

TOP 10 NEOLITHIC STRUCTURES

Stone circles, long barrows and sacred sites - Ellie Tennant picks remarkable Stone Age creations to visit in Britain and Ireland

time to read

9 mins

November 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Secrets from the deep

Venture into the bowels of London's Natural History Museum and you'll discover a realm of deep-sea monsters and rarely seen oddities. Melissa Hobson meets the curious denizens of the Spirit Collection

time to read

6 mins

November 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Ancestral connections

Our landscapes are littered with reminders of our mystical past, and it's one part of living in Britain that has always fascinated me.

time to read

1 min

November 2025

BBC Countryfile Magazine

Kit Running shoes

Whether you're aiming for parkrun or a marathon, here are three road-running options to tick the race-day and training-shoe boxes

time to read

1 min

November 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size