News

  • Bluetit Tales - Naomi

    Bluetit Tales - Naomi

    This year’s Mental Health Awareness Week is all about loneliness, and ways to tackle it. We’re telling tales of Bluetits who have overcome loneliness, made friends, formed connections, and improved their lives through Bluetitting.

    Today, we’re telling a Reading Bluetit’s tale, Naomi.

  • Bluetit Tales - Shellie

    Bluetit Tales - Shellie

    This year's Mental Health Awareness Week is all about loneliness, and ways to tackle it. We're telling tales of Bluetits who have overcome loneliness, made friends, formed connections, and improved their lives through Bluetitting.

    Today, we're telling Shellie's tale. Shellie swims with the Wirral Bluetits.

  • Bluetit Tales - Emmie

    Bluetit Tales - Emmie

    This year's Mental Health Awareness Week is all about loneliness, and ways to tackle it. We're telling tales of Bluetits who have overcome loneliness, made friends, formed connections, and improved their lives through Bluetitting.

    First up is our wonderful admin from Shingle Street Bluetits, Emmie Scott.

  • Bluetitting with Visit Guernsey

    Bluetitting with Visit Guernsey

    Remember that glorious weather we had at the end of March? When we all thought summer had arrived and started merrily putting our winter coats into storage, just in time for the snow to start? Well, Sian spent that wonderful week travelling around the islands of Guernsey and Alderney! We weren’t jealous at all…

  • The Bluetits are Never Knowingly Subtle

    The Bluetits are Never Knowingly Subtle

    Recently, we received a comment on a picture of our much loved Bluetit Swimsuit. It said 'This looks like it's been made for a child.' After some back and forth, we realised that this commenter meant this negatively. What made us all giggle at HQ was that it didn't occur to us for a second that it could be a bad thing!
  • The Bluetit Effect

    The Bluetit Effect

    The Blue Tit Effect was a phenomenon discovered around the 1950s. Bird watchers and milk lovers alike noticed that Bluetits were pecking through milk bottle caps on doorsteps to get to the delicious cream inside. The Blue Tit turned out to be the only bird that did this consistently. The amazing part? It turned out that this was a learned behaviour, passed from Blue Tit to Blue Tit. Robins gave it a go, and some succeeded, but failed to pass it on to any other robins. This means (well we like to think it does) that originally there was just one brave, pesky blue tit who took the plunge. Others watched, and went off to try it themselves. This is known as the Blue Tit Effect.