Ptrekking After Ptarmigan

Searching for Scotland’s alpine birds

Alex Cooper
5 min readDec 12, 2023
male ptarmigan stands on a rock
There’s the chubby bastard. (© Alex Cooper)

Moving to Scotland has given me the opportunity to photograph a wide range of wildlife you don’t get south of the border.

One of the most interesting species to me is the rock ptarmigan, usually simply known as the ptarmigan.*

*Just like a late-night bathroom visit when you don’t want to wake your girlfriend, the ‘p’ is silent.

It’s mostly an Arctic specialist, but here in the UK you can find this chubby bird on a handful of Scottish mountains.

Ptarmigan are members of the grouse family, and while their scientific name Lagopus muta suggests they’re silent, they have a distinctive croaking call that’s often the best way of locating them.

Like some other alpine species, ptarmigan change coats based on the season. Their mottled camouflage in summer changes to almost pure white in winter, with varying stages in between.

There are a few reliable sites for ptarmigan, since they don’t move very far from their mountain homes, but there’s a catch — getting to them. These alpine avians rarely venture below around 800 m, so photographing them doubles up as a good workout.

Reaching their domain is no guarantee of success — you could easily stroll past these camouflaged…

--

--