• Contact us
  • Advertise with us
  • Cumbria Crack app
  • About us
Monday, July 28, 2025
cumbriacrack.com
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Jobs
  • Food & drink
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Jobs
  • Food & drink
No Result
View All Result
cumbriacrack.com
No Result
View All Result
Home News

First signs of spring spotted in January

by Cumbria Crack
09/01/2025
in News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
Picture: The Field Studies Council

Despite plummeting January temperatures and snowfall, the first official signs of spring have been spotted in a project run by a Cumbrian-based charity.

Citizen scientists across the nation have already spotted the first tangible signs that spring is on its way including daffodils and bumblebees.

The sightings have been logged on The Field Studies Council’s Signs of Spring Survey 2025 and more people are being encouraged to start recording a range of other species which indicates that spring is on its way.

The survey, which was conducted for the first time last year, is an initiative run by the Castlehead and Blencathra-based environmental education charity in partnership with the Royal Society of Biology.

In 2024, over 3,700 submissions were made by members of the public with the first sightings in early January.

An interactive live map of 2025 sightings shows the first daffodil was spotted in Newtown, Wales, on January 1, the day the survey opened, and the first bumblebee was seen on January 5 in Bristol.

Helen Robertson, of the Field Studies Council, said: “The data we collect this year will be added to the 2024 survey information so we can start to build a picture of how climate change is impacting the emergence of spring biodiversity.

“The bigger the data set, the more accurate picture we can get of what is happening to the plants and insects that we rely on, so citizen scientists have a huge role to play. Anyone can take part, from school children to pensioners, and we will be collecting information from January through to the end of June.”

The Signs of Spring Survey asks members of the public to record when they first see 10 different signals of warmer weather, including daffodils and bumblebees.

Last year, snowdrops (1,160 sightings) and daffodils (828) were the most recorded signs, followed by hazel catkins (420), bumblebees (409), bluebells (245), butterflies (221), ladybirds (193), first cut of the lawn (125), frog spawn (119) and damselflies and dragonflies (36).

Helen added: “As expected, most – but not all – signs of spring are spotted in the south first, then move north as the weather warms up.

“The results of the survey will help us to map trends over time, giving us definitive evidence of whether climate change is having an effect on our seasonal species. It is also important that we continue to monitor species such as butterflies and bumblebees, as their numbers continue to decrease across the UK due to loss of habitat and lack of green space.”

Sightings can be logged through the Signs of Spring portal at https://survey123.arcgis.com/share/ea91fe9f98e647c888a597d3273abecf

Previous Post

Cumbria councils agree to make devolution a priority

Next Post

MP asks for Government help to reopen South Cumbrian bridges

Have you read?

How has Cumbria police helped your neighbourhood?
News

Police deploy pepper spray after man makes threats of violence

27/07/2025
Lone Lake District walker injured after fall
News

Lone Lake District walker injured after fall

27/07/2025
Reunions at parkrun – which also proves age is no barrier at Penrith
News

Reunions at parkrun – which also proves age is no barrier at Penrith

27/07/2025
High-value power tools stolen from vehicle
News

Witness appeal after two people seriously injured in crash

27/07/2025
Youngsters made to wash police cars and clean park after anti-social behaviour
News

Youngsters made to wash police cars and clean park after anti-social behaviour

26/07/2025
Wordsworth House runs at ‘six-figure loss’ each year
News

Wordsworth House runs at ‘six-figure loss’ each year

26/07/2025

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive daily updates direct to your inbox!

*We hate spam as much as you do. Privacy Statement

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

33 Middlegate
Penrith
Cumbria
CA11 7SY

Phone: 01768 862313
Email: admin@cumbriacrack.com

Registered in England as Barrnon Media Limited. No: 12475190
VAT registration number: 343486488

Explore

  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Jobs

Useful links

  • Contact us
  • Send a sport report
  • Get our app
  • Advertise with us
  • About us

Follow us on

Newsletter

Subscribe to our mailing list to receive daily updates direct to your inbox!

*We hate spam as much as you do. Privacy Statement

Check your inbox or spam folder to confirm your subscription.

© Barrnon Media Limited 2023

Terms & Conditions / Privacy Policy / Cookie Policy
This website and its associated newspaper are members of the Independent Press Standards Organisation
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Sport
    • All sport
    • Carlisle United
  • Business
  • What’s on
  • Jobs
  • Food & drink

© 2025 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.