- Ring and RSPB are giving 50 cameras to see garden birds
- The draw is open to residents of the United Kingdom between 18 and 35 years.
- Follow a survey that found that 24% of young adults plan to start observing birds
Ring and RSPB is giving 50 free ring outdoor cameras for free, so that you can watch the birds that visit their garden even when they are away from home. The offer is open to people in the United Kingdom between 18 and 35 years old, and can request completing a form that explains why you want to participate.
The raffle follows a recent ring survey, which found that 60% of customers regularly look at garden birds using their home security cameras, and 24% of respondents under 35 planned to start seeing birds this spring.
Although Ring is better known for making some of the best videos of videos, many users prefer to use their cameras to enjoy wildlife in their gardens. Blue tits, big tits, urracas, pigeons and owls are popular themes of user shared video images.
More than half of the respondents said they saw the attractiveness of the remote observation of birds, and almost three quarters said that seeing birds and listening to the birds is good for their well -being.
Make your garden friendly for birds
If you want to help support your local garden birds, the RSPB has offered some simple suggestions to begin with:
- Install friendly habitats for birds, such as nests and food stations
- Keep the gardens and green spaces for wildlife planting native flora
- Send your ring devices from key species such as Song Thrush and Greenfinch using the ‘Share’ function
If you do not have your own garden, be attentive to the beginning of Springwatch 2025 in the BBC, where you can see the progress of all types of birds that nest, from blue tits to Águilas, and enjoy the food in live videos from 7am to 10 pm The series is usually transmitted in May, so the dates of this year could be announced at any time.