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Fauna · Guildford, Surrey, United Kingdom

Common Toad Migration — Surrey Hills England

The common toad (Bufo bufo) migration in southern England — the largest and most widespread amphibian migration event in the British Isles, with an estimated 15 million toads migrating to breeding ponds annually — is most concentrated and most observable at traditional migration crossing points where roads intersect ancient toad routes. At sites like Ockham Common in Surrey and Cors Caron in Wales, volunteer toad patrols carry toads across roads in buckets on March evenings, and the spectacle of thousands of toads moving across a country lane on a warm wet March night — the males piled on females in amplexus, the smaller males attempting to mount anything that moves — is one of Britain's most visceral spring wildlife events. The oldest toad migration routes can be 100+ years old, the same hedge-crossings used by ancestral toads whose chemical trail persists as a navigational cue across generations.

When
Feb — Apr, peak Mar
Best viewing
A torchlit March evening on a Surrey country lane, surrounded by hundreds of migrating toads en route to breeding ponds, with volunteer patrols actively carrying toads across the road. Visceral, hands-on, and unmistakably wild.
Category
Fauna
Status
Returns Mar 2027

About this spectacle

On warm, wet March evenings in Surrey, something ancient stirs beneath the hedgerows. Thousands of common toads emerge and begin their determined march toward ancestral breeding ponds, crossing country lanes in dense, shuffling columns. At Ockham Common, volunteer toad patrols intercept the migration at road crossings, ferrying toads across in buckets by torchlight — a hands-on ritual that puts visitors in direct contact with the spectacle. The air carries the damp-earth smell of a proper English spring night. Underfoot and in the beam of every headtorch: males locked in amplexus on females' backs, smaller males tumbling over one another in frantic competition, the occasional toad attempting to mount a boot. The sheer biomass is startling — hundreds of toads per metre on busy crossing points. These routes are over a century old, worn into the landscape by generations of toads following the same chemical trails. Visiting means standing in a dark lane, rain on your jacket, watching an unbroken chain of amphibian life play out exactly as it has for longer than anyone can remember.

When to go

Feb — Apr, peak Mar

Getting there

Nearest airport: LHR. Nearest city: Guildford.

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