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Fauna · Blakeney Point, Norfolk, United Kingdom

Common Seal Autumn Pupping — Blakeney Point

Each November and December, the remote shingle spit of Blakeney Point in Norfolk hosts the largest grey seal pupping colony in England — over 4,000 pups born on the shingle and dune grass between November and January — and the second-largest common seal pupping colony in England in summer, creating Britain's most accessible seal pupping experience via boat trips from Morston Quay that approach the colony within metres of nursing mothers and white-coated newborn pups. The grey seal pups' pure white birth coat is replaced within three weeks by their adult grey spotted pelage, and the rapid development from helpless newborn to independent seal over the colony season creates a wildlife spectacle that changes daily from the first weeks of November through January. The colony has expanded dramatically in recent decades — from under 500 pups in 1990 to over 4,000 today — and the sheer density of animals on the shingle, with adult bulls fighting for territory around groups of nursing mothers and their white pups, creates a noise and activity level of considerable dramatic power. The Blakeney Point landscape — a remote shingle spit reachable only by boat or a five-kilometre walk — adds an element of genuine wildness to the encounter. Knot and dunlin roost on the shingle around the seal colony in their thousands simultaneously.

When
Jan — Dec, peak Nov — Jan
Best viewing
A boat from Morston Quay brings you metres from thousands of grey seal pups and nursing mothers on a remote Norfolk shingle spit, with roaring bulls, moulting pups and wheeling shorebird flocks creating an immersive wildlife experience.
Category
Fauna
Status
In season

About this spectacle

Each November through January, Blakeney Point's wild shingle spit fills with the spectacle of thousands of grey seal pups — over 4,000 born each season — their pure white coats contrasting against dark storm-beach shingle. Visitors arrive by boat from Morston Quay, drifting to within metres of nursing mothers whose deep, mournful calls compete with the bellowing roars of territorial bulls jostling for position. The colony is dense and alive: newborns wobble on flippers while older pups, already moulting into spotted grey adult coats, sleep in heaving huddles. The air carries the rich, salt-and-oil smell of a seal colony at full intensity. Over the weeks, the scene transforms daily as pups grow from helpless cream bundles into robust independent weaners. In summer, common seals pup here too, adding a second seasonal act. On the shingle margins, vast flocks of knot and dunlin wheel and roost, their silver-and-rust clouds providing a shorebird counterpoint to the mammal drama. The five-kilometre walk as an alternative to the boat heightens the sense of wild remoteness and genuine discovery.

When to go

Jan — Dec, peak Nov — Jan

Getting there

Nearest airport: NWI. Nearest city: Norwich.

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