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OP2

Wild bird seed mixture

£787.00

ha · year

format_list_bulleted What to do

  • Establish a seed mix containing at least 6 small seed-bearing crops in blocks or strips of at least 6 metres wide and between 0.4ha and 5ha in size.
  • Ensure the mix complies with organic certification rules.
  • Re-establish 1-year mixes annually and 2-year mixes every other year.
  • Retain winter bird food plots until 15 February each year.

schedule When to do

  • Sow seed mix between 15 February and 15 June.
  • Retain winter bird food plots until 15 February each year.

checklist How to do and evidence required

  • Seed invoices
  • Field operations at the parcel level, including associated invoices
  • A valid organic certificate and schedule for all the parcels entered into this option at application and on your annual claim

View Official Guidelines

Access detailed information about this action on the RPA website

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info Additional Information

OP2: Wild bird seed mixture - GOV.UK

How much will be paid

£787 per hectare (ha).

Where to use this option

It’s available for Countryside Stewardship Mid Tier and Higher Tier, on whole or part parcels in rotation on:

  • land registered as organic or ‘in conversion’ with a Defra-licensed organic control body
  • land that has been sown to grass for fewer than 7 years

You can locate the following options on the same area as this option.

How this option will benefit the environment

It provides important food resources (small seeds) for farmland birds, especially in autumn and winter.

The flowering plants will benefit insects including bumblebees, solitary bees, butterflies and hoverflies.

Aims

If you’re selected for a site visit, we will check that delivery of the aims is being met and the prohibited activities have not been carried out. This will ensure the environmental benefits are being delivered.

During the spring or summer, the seed mix, containing at least 6 small seed-bearing crops (not maize), will be established in blocks or strips of at least 6 metres (m) wide and between 0.4ha and 5ha in size. For 2 year mixes, during the second spring, biennial plants, such as kale, will show continued growth and development.

Throughout the summer the plants will grow and flower.

By autumn the plants will set seed. This will provide the much-needed supply of small seeds throughout the winter, until at least mid-February.

Prohibited activities

To achieve the aims and deliver the environmental benefits, do not carry out any of the following activities.

  • Allow an individual crop group to exceed 90% of the total mix by weight
  • Sow the following crops:
  • artichokes
  • canary grass
  • giant and intermediate sorghum
  • maize
  • miscanthus
  • sweet clover
  • tic beans

On your annual claim you will be asked to declare that you have not carried out any prohibited activities.

Recommended management

To assist you in achieving the aims and deliver the environmental benefits for this option, we recommend that you use best practice.

We recommend that you:

  • make sure blocks or strips are at least 6m wide and a minimum of 0.4ha in size - the maximum individual plot size is 5ha
  • establish by sowing a seed mix containing at least 6 seed bearing crops between 15 February and 15 June. Seed mixes may contain a maximum of 3 of the following cereal crops:
  • barley
  • oats
  • rye
  • triticale
  • wheat
  • make sure the mix complies with organic certification rules. Apply to your organic control body for a derogation if organic seed is unavailable
  • re-establish 1-year mixes annually and 2-year mixes every other year to maintain seed production
  • re-sow winter bird plots that fail to establish
  • retain winter bird food plots until 15 February each year

For advice on what to sow and re-sow, read the Additional guidance and advice section.

Keeping records

Where there is uncertainty about whether the aims of the options have been delivered, we will take into account any records or evidence you may have kept demonstrating delivery of the aims of the option. This will include any steps you’ve taken to follow the recommended management set out above. It’s your responsibility to keep such records if you want to rely on these to support your claim.

  • Seed invoices
  • Field operations at the parcel level, including associated invoices
  • A valid organic certificate and schedule for all the parcels entered into this option at application and on your annual claim – the Rural Payments Agency (RPA) will not request this information if you have already supplied it for a Basic Payment Scheme (BPS) claim

Additional guidance and advice

The following advice is helpful, but they are not requirements for this item.

Pick the right location

Use this option on most areas of the farm but mixtures work best in sunny locations and on fertile sites.

Avoid planting underneath overhanging trees or next to shading woodland. This leads to poorer establishment, growth and seed production.

You should place winter bird food mixes next to a field edge but they can extend into the field. Leave access to surrounding crops to allow for management.

Block and plot sizes

Creating wider and bigger areas of winter bird food allows more seeds to remain undiscovered for longer, which extends their value well into winter.

Smaller areas tend to suffer from birds eating all the food within a short time.

What to sow

Sow plants that will provide an extended supply of seeds for farmland birds from autumn into late winter.

Annual mixtures can include a range of cereal, brassica or other small-seeded crops such as:

  • dwarf sunflower
  • fodder radish
  • gold of pleasure
  • linseed
  • mustard
  • quinoa
  • red millet
  • spring barley
  • spring oats
  • spring triticale
  • spring wheat
  • white millet

Include biennial crops such as kale, stubble turnip or teasel in 2-year mixtures.

Make sure a single crop group, such as cereals or brassicas, is not more than 90% of the total seed mix by weight. The table below shows the crops most commonly sown in winter bird food seed mixes.

Crop group Crops most commonly sown in winter bird food seed mixes
Cereal Barley
Oats
Red millet
Rye
Triticale
Wheat
White millet
Brassica Fodder radish
Forage rape
Gold of pleasure
Kale
Mustard
Oilseed rape
Stubble turnip
Other Buckwheat
Chicory
Dwarf sunflower
Linseed
Teasel

To minimise the build-up of diseases, pests and weeds over time consider alternating between sowing cereal and brassica-based mixes on non-rotational plots every few years.

Structural crops

Structural crops that predominantly provide cover, and/or support for weaker stemmed crops such as barley and millet (which can be prone to lodging), can be included in the seed mix.

The following structural crops can be included:

  • chicory
  • dwarf sorghum
  • Japanese reed millet
  • sweet fennel

To ensure that these structural crops do not adversely compete with the main seed-bearing crops the following maximum seed rates are recommended:

  • chicory - 0.3 kg/ha
  • dwarf sorghum - 5 kg/ha
  • Japanese reed millet - 2 kg/ha
  • sweet fennel - 1 kg/ha

Where two or more structural crops are included in a seed mix reduce the maximum seed rate for each structural crop by 50%.

When and how to sow

Establish the plot between 1 March and 15 June, but ideally between mid-March and early June.

Create a fine and firm seedbed with seed sown at a depth between 1.5 centimetres (cm) and 2.5cm. Moisture and warmth will help any brassicas establish quickly to protect against flea beetle damage.

Managing the option

Apply organic fertilisers to help crops grow away from pest damage and produce plenty of seed.

Remember that winter bird food should be in place until at least 31 December in year 5 of the agreement.

Integrated Pest Management (IPM)

This option can form part of an IPM approach to prevent the establishment of pests, weeds and diseases. If successful, appropriate and within proximity of cropped areas, these may limit the need for the use of Plant Protection Products and enhance wildlife and biodiversity on your holding. Read information on IPM at AHDB (Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board) Integrated Pest Management and LEAF (Linking Environment and Farming).

Biodiversity

This option has been identified as being beneficial for biodiversity. All Countryside Stewardship habitat creation, restoration and management options are of great significance for biodiversity recovery, as are the wide range of arable options in the scheme. Capital items and supplements can support this habitat work depending on the holding’s situation and potential.

The connectivity of habitats is also very important and habitat options should be linked wherever possible. Better connectivity will allow wildlife to move/colonise freely to access water, food, shelter and breeding habitat, and will allow natural communities of both animals and plants to adapt in response to environmental and climate change.

Further information

Read Countryside Stewardship: get funding to protect and improve the land you manage to find out more information about Mid Tier and Higher Tier including how to apply.

Published 2 April 2015 Last updated 4 January 2024 + show all updates

  1. 18 December 2023

Update to How Much Is Paid

  1. 31 January 2022

Additional guidance and advice section updated - this option can form part of an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) approach to prevent the establishment of pests, weeds and diseases.

  1. 23 March 2021

'Structural crops' section has been added and 'Prohibited activities' section updated.

  1. 5 February 2021

Option updated for agreements starting 1 January 2022

  1. 28 April 2020

The Requirements, Keeping records and Advice and suggestions for how to carry out this option sections were updated yesterday

  1. 27 April 2020

This page has been updated

  1. 17 May 2018

From 1 January 2019, this option cannot be used on land already receiving funding for Ecological Focus Areas (EFAs) declared for the Basic Payment Scheme (BPS).

  1. 7 March 2017

Updated for 2017 applications.

  1. 29 March 2016

Information updated for applications in 2016.

  1. 2 April 2015

First published.