Storks wherever you look. The stork village of Pentowo in Poland is an Eldorado for stork fans. The 20th meeting of the European Stork Villages took place there in May 2023: a unique experience for everyone involved.
If you like white storks, you'll love this place in north-eastern Poland: in an area roughly the size of two football pitches, 23 pairs of the large wading birds are raising their young. Only a handful of other villages can boast a similarly high concentration of stork pairs in such a small area. There’s a constant clattering sound coming from the nests and storks glide like low-flying planes over the heads of visitors. The stork’s already low flight distance (the distance at which the bird will take flight when approached by a potential predator) seems to have been almost completely cast aside in Pentowo.
Stork fans eagerly clamber up the large observation tower that stands in the middle of a grassy area in Pentowo and find themselves at eye level with the black-and-white birds. Those with binoculars to hand are able to look right into the storks’ eyes - a moving experience. There are few other places in Europe where it’s possible to get such a close-up glimpse into the family life of these charismatic birds.
A Polish premiere
The 20th meeting of the European Stork Villages Network took place from 22 to 25 May 2023. Hosting the event for the first time was the commune of Tykocin. The village of around 2,000 inhabitants is situated in north-eastern Poland, on the banks of the Narew River. Up until the Second World War, Tykocin was one of the most important centres of Jewish life in Poland; even today, the large restored synagogue and a nationally renowned restaurant serving kosher food serve as reminders of the commune’s former significance. In the extensive reed beds along the Narew, several different warbler species sing, the bittern lets out its hollow call - clearly audible in the village at night - and the golden oriole can be heard fluting from the wet woodland.
Birds in reed beds and marshland forests
But the real star of the avian show in Tykocin is the white stork - although you have to travel three kilometres west of the village if you really want to see a lot of them. That's where you’ll find Pentowo - little more than a farmstead with three large stables and two cosy wooden houses. Pentowo forms part of the commune of Tykocin, and it’s here that this single farmstead is host to the largest white stork colony in Poland.
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Directions & accomodation
This year (2023) 23 stork pairs are breeding on the specially installed platforms and in the trees around the farmstead. . Overall, Pentowo’s evolution has been astonishing. At the end of the 1980s, just two pairs raised their young there. Thanks to the determination of farm owner Łukasz Toczyłowski and his father - and a collaboration with local bird protection association, North Podlasian Bird Protection Association (POTP) - it has been possible to increase the number of nests 15-fold by constructing artificial nesting platforms.
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Poland: The stork’s (former) happy place
Storks are suffering from habitat loss, colliding with power lines and being shot down on their migration routes. Because of these multiple threats affecting their breeding, resting and overwintering sites, local initiatives such as those promoted by the European Stork Villages Network are more important than ever when it comes to protecting the birds.
Where frogs and corncrakes bid one another good night
Łukasz Toczyłowski runs a horse farm and stables in Pentowo. Local people can stable their horses with Łukasz, who also offers riding lessons and carriage rides. Łukasz gives guided tours around his farm too, where an information centre, two viewing towers and a series of information boards provide visitors with the opportunity to learn more about the white stork.
The foraging grounds nearby are managed in a nature-friendly way. Frogs frolic in what was once a meander in the Narew River, their sporadic croaking gradually intensifying to become a raucous concert after dark. The wet grassland, which was drained in the past but has now been restored by partial rewetting, is extensively grazed by the farm's horses or mown at staggered intervals. And it's not just the stork who likes it that way: a family of cranes strides through the tall grass and, at dusk, the characteristic ‘crex crex’ call of the corncrake can be heard.
A mayor in cycling shorts
The recent increased involvement of the Polish stork village in the network - and, as a consequence, its organisation of the first ever network meeting in Tykocin at the end of May this year - is also a measure of how much the award is appreciated within the commune. Mayor Mariusz Dudziński, who has held office for three years, recognised the value of the title ‘European Stork Village’ and, with the help of his team, organised a successful meeting full of warm hospitality and local colour. Dudziński was present on each of the conference days, even cycling between Tykocin and Pentowo after work so he could also attend the social event. That evening, the midges got to know one particular victim very well indeed...
Stork conservationists and representatives from five other stork villages made the journey to Tykocin. “Unfortunately, the turnout at this meeting was rather poor,” says Ilka Beermann, the initiative’s project manager at EuroNatur. “In some communities, interest in sharing ideas and knowledge seems to be low. But as long as there are still motivated people in the stork villages, we will keep the network going.”
Face-to-face meetings, like the one in Tykocin at the end of May, certainly help to boost the motivation levels of those who attend - that much was plain to see. “We were able to engage in in-depth discussions and had more time than usual to discuss developments in the individual communities,” said Beermann. Maybe it’s precisely this kind of exchange, on both a personal and a transnational level, that has kept the European Stork Villages initiative alive over 29 years and 20 meetings: the mix of motivated avian conservationists and dedicated people from the communities, the interplay between species conservation and the political will to act in the best interests of these feathered honorary citizens. All of them - volunteers and professionals, conservationists and local politicians - are brought together by this charismatic poster bird of our semi-natural pastures: the white stork.
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The network of European Stork Villages
The author of this article lives in a part of Germany with a large number of storks. But he has never seen so many white storks in one place as in Pentowo.