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Section: Nature & Garden

"I can barely hear the birds anymore" – Why a 74-year-old Shropshire craftsman is selling his last handcrafted birdhouses at a special price before he puts down his tools for good.

IIn the hills of south Shropshire, Tom Aldridge has been building bird boxes by hand for over 40 years. Now the 74-year-old is setting down his carving knife – and saying goodbye with one final collection. Why are these birdhouses so sought-after? Because after this, there will never be another one.

Earl Calloway (74) in his workshop outside Ludlow, Shropshire. After 43 years, he's closing his life's work – and worrying about the birds.

Ludlow, Shropshire – February. The workshop is small. Maybe fifteen by twenty feet, tucked behind the house at the end of a gravel driveway. On the walls hang hand saws, block planes and carving knives – some of them passed down from Earl's father, who built furniture in this same shop until 1979. In the corner sits a cast-iron woodstove that fills the room with dry warmth and the faint smell of cherry wood smoke. On the workbench lie half-finished birdhouses: cleanly planed white oak side panels, tiny roof shingles that he shapes one by one with a drawknife.

 

Earl runs his hand over a piece of wood he's sanding. "You know what gets to me the most?" he asks without looking up. "It ain't the shop. It ain't the stopping. It's that it's getting quieter out there. A little quieter every year."

 

He's talking about the decline of songbirds. And the numbers back him up.

what most homeowners don't realize: the silent decline happening right in our garden

What most people don't know: The UK has lost over 40 million birds since 1970. That's roughly one in three. House sparrows, starlings, song thrushes, spotted flycatchers – species that used to be part of every garden are finding fewer and fewer safe nesting spots. Old-growth trees with natural cavities are being cut down. Hedgerows are replaced by vinyl fences. New construction offers no shelter. Even rural areas are losing habitat at an alarming rate.

"Twenty years ago, I'd open the shop in the morning and it was like a symphony. Blue tits, a song thrush calling from the hedgerow, house sparrows rattling about in the ivy. Now? Some mornings it's dead quiet. And that scares me more than anything."

But what really frustrates him: Most bird boxes you can buy today don't actually help the birds – some even harm them.

"most birdhouses on the market weren't designed with birds in mind"

Earl doesn't hold back when you ask him about garden-centre birdhouses. "People buy them with the best intentions. But a lot of what's sold hasn't been designed around how birds actually behave — and some of it can cause real problems."

 

He lists what he's observed over 43 years:

 

Entry holes that are too large."If the opening is too wide, starlings and great spotted woodpeckers can enlarge it and drive out the smaller birds. Or worse – a grey squirrel can reach right in and wipe out the whole nest. I've seen it happen."

 

Treated or painted wood."A lot of those cheap birdhouses are slathered in paint or stain. Looks real pretty hanging on the fence. But birds are incredibly sensitive to chemical fumes. They won't go near it – or their chicks get sick from the off-gassing."

 

Walls that are too thin."A birdhouse with quarter-inch plywood walls? That's a tent, not a house. In February, the nestlings freeze. In July, over 40°C inside. I've pulled dead chicks out of those things. It ain't right."

 

No ventilation, no drainage."If rainwater gets in and can't drain out, the nest rots. If there's no air moving, parasites pile up. I've cracked open big-box birdhouses after one season that were black with mold and crawling with mites. That's what birds are nesting in."

 

No way to clean them out."After every nesting season, you gotta clean the house out. Old nests are full of parasites. But try opening one of those glued-together houses – you'll break it before you get it open." Earl shakes his head. "Folks mean well. They just don't know what matters. And nobody's telling them."

Every cut is second nature – after 40+ years, Earl knows every grain of the wood by feel.

43 years of watching, a lifetime of learning – how the ridgeline birdhouse was born

Earl never just "built birdhouses." He watched. For decades.

 

"I started when I was in my early thirties, nailing together simple nest boxes for blue tits. Real basic stuff. And then I started paying attention: Which ones get used? Which ones sit empty? Why does a blue tit move into Box A but ignore Box B, even though it's hanging ten feet away on the same tree?"

 

That was the beginning of a decades-long experiment – carried out in the woods behind his property and in neighbours' gardens all across south Shropshire. Earl kept a notebook documenting which houses were occupied and which weren't. He changed dimensions, wood species, hanging heights, entry hole sizes. He talked to birders at the local RSPB group. He read British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) publications. And over the years, he developed a birdhouse based on real observation, not guesswork.

 

The result: the Ridgeline Birdhouse – named after the Long Mynd ridge he sees from his workshop window every morning.

what makes earl's ridgeline birdhouse different from everything else

Every detail has a reason. Not because it looks nicer – but because it works for the birds.

 

Entry hole: exactly 28mm (just over an inch). "That ain't random," says Earl. "One and a quarter inches – perfect for blue tits, great tits, and coal tits — the small hole keeps starlings and house sparrows from taking over. Big enough that they fly in and out easy. But too small for house sparrows and starlings that bully the little guys out. An eighth of an inch either way makes the difference between a full nest and an empty box."

 

Solid, untreated American white oak, 19mm wall thickness. "White oak is naturally rot-resistant – no paint, no stain, no chemicals needed. And three-quarter-inch walls insulate. In winter, the nest holds heat. In summer, nothing turns into an oven. That's the difference between a house that works and one that doesn't."

 

Extended roof overhang. The roof extends well past the entry hole on purpose. "Keeps driving rain out. Blocks direct afternoon sun. And – this is the important part – it stops grey squirrels and cats from reaching down into the hole from above. A flat-roofed birdhouse is an all-you-can-eat buffet for predators."

 

Ventilation slots in the floor. Small, carefully placed openings allow air to circulate and moisture to drain. "No mold, no standing water, no mite nursery."

 

Side-opening clean-out panel. "Pop it open in October, pull out the old nest, give it a quick brush – done. The house lasts for decades this way. Season after season. I've got customers still using houses I built in the nineties."

 

Stainless steel screw eye for hanging. Won't rust, lasts for years, easy to hang on a branch, a post, or a porch beam. "No plastic hooks, no cheap wire. Simple, solid, done."

remaining stock from earl's final collection

"i've got houses that have been occupied for over 20 years"

Earl opens a drawer and pulls out a battered composition notebook. In it, he's documented over the years which of his houses got occupied – and for how long.

 

"This one right here," he taps an entry, "I built in 2002 for my neighbour Dale up on the lane past Bromfield. It's been on the same fence post since then. Blue tits every spring. Every single year. Going on twenty-three years now."

 

He flips further. "Here – the Hartley family over in Church Stretton. Ordered three in 2009. Their daughter emailed me last fall – all three still going. One's got blue tits, one's got a great tit pair, and the third has a wren using it every spring like clockwork."

 

That's not luck. It's the result of untreated hardwood that breathes right, dimensions that actually work, and craftsmanship built to last decades – not one season from a garden centre shelf.

Built to last: A Ridgeline Birdhouse in its natural setting, doing what it was made for.

the end of an era – and one last chance

This spring, Earl is closing his workshop for good.

 

"My hands can't do it anymore," he says, holding them out. They're strong, calloused, but stiff – decades of handwork have taken their toll. The arthritis in his knuckles makes fine work harder every month. "I can still rip a board on the table saw. But the detail work – shaping the entry hole to the exact right size, hand-sanding the interior so there's no splinters for the chicks – I can't do that like I used to."

 

He has no one to pass it on to. "My son's an engineer down in Bristol. My daughter teaches in Norwich. My granddaughter's at Loughborough studying business" He laughs quietly, but there's sadness underneath. "Nobody wants to be a woodworker. I get it. But it means when I'm done, it's done."

 

On his shelves sit the last handcrafted Ridgeline Birdhouses he'll ever make. The final batch. Every one of them finished by his own hands.

"it's not about the money – it's about the birds"

To get the remaining houses into good hands before nesting season, Earl has made an unusual decision: He's letting them go at a steep discount.

 

"I want them in gardens where they're needed. With folks who understand why this matters. Not sitting on a shelf at an antique mall – but actually hanging in a tree, doing what they were made to do."

 

His granddaughter Emma (24) is helping him sell them online. "I don't know the first thing about websites and all that," Earl says with a wave of his hand. "Emma set the whole thing up. She says there's a lot of people out there who want exactly this – they just don't know where to find it."

what makes the ridgeline birdhouse special:

100% handcrafted from solid American hardwood: Each birdhouse is individually sawn, planed, sanded and assembled in Earl's shop – no factory, no assembly line, no overseas manufacturing.

Bird-friendly construction: 1 ¼-inch entry hole, ¾-inch wall thickness, ventilation slots, clean-out panel – every detail is based on 43 years of real-world observation and BTO and RSPB-recommended specifications.

Untreated American white oak: No paint, no stain, no chemicals, no off-gassing – naturally rot-resistant and 100% safe for nesting birds and their chicks.

Built to last decades: Not a disposable seasonal product, but a birdhouse that gets occupied year after year – some for over 20 years and counting.

Predator protection: Extended roof overhang prevents grey squirrels, cats and weasels from reaching into the entry hole from above.

Limited quantity: Only the last Ridgeline Birdhouses from Earl's workshop remain – when they're gone, they're gone for good.

shop the last birdhouse

what customers are saying:

4.8

Over 5,900 houses sold — rated exclusively by verified buyers

Karen P.

April 17, 2026

Verified Customer

"Hung it on the old maple in our garden in October. By early March, a pair of blue tits had already moved in. Now I hear birdsong right outside the kitchen window every morning while I drink my coffee – hadn't had that in years."

33

Jodie C.

April 19, 2026

Verified Customer

"We had two birdhouses from the garden centre hanging in the garden for three years. Not one bird ever went near them. Put up Earl's house and within six weeks we had a pair of great tits nesting. The difference is night and day."

12

Mark T.

April 24, 2026

Verified Customer

"My dad was a finish carpenter for 40 years. He'd have admired this. The joinery, the wood selection, the proportions – everything's dialed in. And the best part: a pair of blue tits had moved straight in within two weeks of hanging it up."

9

Donna W.

May 01, 2026

Verified Customer

"Ordered three – one for our garden, one for my parents in Derbyshire, and one for the neighbors. My husband was like, why don't we just grab one from garden centres? Then he held it in his hands and felt the weight. When I explained why the entry hole size matters so much, he got it. Now he wants a fourth one for the farm."

3

a gift that comes alive

The Ridgeline Birdhouse is more than a garden accessory. It's a gift with real purpose – for bird lovers, gardeners, grandparents who want to show their grandkids how a blue tit family grows up. For the dad who already has everything. For the neighbor who just mentioned she misses hearing birds. Or for yourself – because every spring morning deserves a little birdsong.

"You know what makes my whole year? When somebody sends me a picture of a little blue tit poking its head out of one of my houses. Then I know it worked. The house is in the right spot. And out there, it's a little less quiet."

43 years of craft, a lifetime for the birds.

where can i buy the ridgeline birdhouse?

The original Ridgeline Birdhouse by Earl Calloway is available exclusively through this online store – where his granddaughter Emma manages Earl's small shop. Only here will you find the original Ridgeline Birdhouses. You may find similar-looking birdhouses elsewhere, but they have nothing to do with Earl's 43 years of field-tested, BTO and RSPB-informed design.

only this spring – then it's over

Earl plans to close his workshop for good this spring. "I want every last house in good hands before nesting season hits. After that, I'm done," he says. He looks out the shop window toward the ridgeline. "Forty-three years. It was a good run."

 

If you want one of the original Ridgeline Birdhouses from Earl's final batch, don't wait too long. With the discounted price and spring nesting season right around the corner, the remaining stock won't last.

 

This is the last chance to put a piece of real Shropshire craftsmanship in your garden – and give a bird a home that actually works.

check availability here >>

UPDATE: Earl is officially closing his workshop this spring. To make sure every last Ridgeline Birdhouse finds a home before nesting season ends, he's clearing out his remaining stock at 50% OFF. Once these are gone, there will never be another one. No restock. No next batch. 

 

Check what's still available here >>

Risk-Free: 100% Money-Back Guarantee

Hang the Ridgeline Birdhouse in your garden. Watch what happens. If you're not impressed – by the craftsmanship, the materials, the quality – send it back for a full refund. No questions asked. No hassle.

get your birdhouse now

"I can barely hear the birds anymore" – Why a 74-year-old Shropshire craftsman is selling his last handcrafted birdhouses at a special price before he puts down his tools for good.

IIn the hills of south Shropshire, Tom Aldridge has been building bird boxes by hand for over 40 years. Now the 74-year-old is setting down his carving knife – and saying goodbye with one final collection. Why are these birdhouses so sought-after? Because after this, there will never be another one.

Earl Calloway (74) in his workshop outside Ludlow, Shropshire. After 43 years, he's closing his life's work – and worrying about the birds.

Ludlow, Shropshire – February. The workshop is small. Maybe fifteen by twenty feet, tucked behind the house at the end of a gravel driveway. On the walls hang hand saws, block planes and carving knives – some of them passed down from Earl's father, who built furniture in this same shop until 1979. In the corner sits a cast-iron woodstove that fills the room with dry warmth and the faint smell of cherry wood smoke. On the workbench lie half-finished birdhouses: cleanly planed white oak side panels, tiny roof shingles that he shapes one by one with a drawknife.

 

Earl runs his hand over a piece of wood he's sanding. "You know what gets to me the most?" he asks without looking up. "It ain't the shop. It ain't the stopping. It's that it's getting quieter out there. A little quieter every year."

 

He's talking about the decline of songbirds. And the numbers back him up.

what most homeowners don't realize: the silent decline happening right in our garden

What most people don't know: The UK has lost over 40 million birds since 1970. That's roughly one in three. House sparrows, starlings, song thrushes, spotted flycatchers – species that used to be part of every garden are finding fewer and fewer safe nesting spots. Old-growth trees with natural cavities are being cut down. Hedgerows are replaced by vinyl fences. New construction offers no shelter. Even rural areas are losing habitat at an alarming rate.

"Twenty years ago, I'd open the shop in the morning and it was like a symphony. Blue tits, a song thrush calling from the hedgerow, house sparrows rattling about in the ivy. Now? Some mornings it's dead quiet. And that scares me more than anything."

But what really frustrates him: Most bird boxes you can buy today don't actually help the birds – some even harm them.

"most birdhouses on the market weren't designed with birds in mind"

Earl doesn't hold back when you ask him about garden-centre birdhouses. "People buy them with the best intentions. But a lot of what's sold hasn't been designed around how birds actually behave — and some of it can cause real problems."

 

He lists what he's observed over 43 years:

 

Entry holes that are too large."If the opening is too wide, starlings and great spotted woodpeckers can enlarge it and drive out the smaller birds. Or worse – a grey squirrel can reach right in and wipe out the whole nest. I've seen it happen."

 

Treated or painted wood."A lot of those cheap birdhouses are slathered in paint or stain. Looks real pretty hanging on the fence. But birds are incredibly sensitive to chemical fumes. They won't go near it – or their chicks get sick from the off-gassing."

 

Walls that are too thin."A birdhouse with quarter-inch plywood walls? That's a tent, not a house. In February, the nestlings freeze. In July, over 40°C inside. I've pulled dead chicks out of those things. It ain't right."

 

No ventilation, no drainage."If rainwater gets in and can't drain out, the nest rots. If there's no air moving, parasites pile up. I've cracked open big-box birdhouses after one season that were black with mold and crawling with mites. That's what birds are nesting in."

 

No way to clean them out."After every nesting season, you gotta clean the house out. Old nests are full of parasites. But try opening one of those glued-together houses – you'll break it before you get it open." Earl shakes his head. "Folks mean well. They just don't know what matters. And nobody's telling them."

Every cut is second nature – after 40+ years, Earl knows every grain of the wood by feel.

43 years of watching, a lifetime of learning – how the ridgeline birdhouse was born

Earl never just "built birdhouses." He watched. For decades.

 

"I started when I was in my early thirties, nailing together simple nest boxes for blue tits. Real basic stuff. And then I started paying attention: Which ones get used? Which ones sit empty? Why does a blue tit move into Box A but ignore Box B, even though it's hanging ten feet away on the same tree?"

 

That was the beginning of a decades-long experiment – carried out in the woods behind his property and in neighbours' gardens all across south Shropshire. Earl kept a notebook documenting which houses were occupied and which weren't. He changed dimensions, wood species, hanging heights, entry hole sizes. He talked to birders at the local RSPB group. He read British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) publications. And over the years, he developed a birdhouse based on real observation, not guesswork.

 

The result: the Ridgeline Birdhouse – named after the Long Mynd ridge he sees from his workshop window every morning.

what makes earl's ridgeline birdhouse different from everything else

Every detail has a reason. Not because it looks nicer – but because it works for the birds.

 

Entry hole: exactly 28mm (just over an inch). "That ain't random," says Earl. "One and a quarter inches – perfect for blue tits, great tits, and coal tits — the small hole keeps starlings and house sparrows from taking over. Big enough that they fly in and out easy. But too small for house sparrows and starlings that bully the little guys out. An eighth of an inch either way makes the difference between a full nest and an empty box."

 

Solid, untreated American white oak, 19mm wall thickness. "White oak is naturally rot-resistant – no paint, no stain, no chemicals needed. And three-quarter-inch walls insulate. In winter, the nest holds heat. In summer, nothing turns into an oven. That's the difference between a house that works and one that doesn't."

 

Extended roof overhang. The roof extends well past the entry hole on purpose. "Keeps driving rain out. Blocks direct afternoon sun. And – this is the important part – it stops grey squirrels and cats from reaching down into the hole from above. A flat-roofed birdhouse is an all-you-can-eat buffet for predators."

 

Ventilation slots in the floor. Small, carefully placed openings allow air to circulate and moisture to drain. "No mold, no standing water, no mite nursery."

 

Side-opening clean-out panel. "Pop it open in October, pull out the old nest, give it a quick brush – done. The house lasts for decades this way. Season after season. I've got customers still using houses I built in the nineties."

 

Stainless steel screw eye for hanging. Won't rust, lasts for years, easy to hang on a branch, a post, or a porch beam. "No plastic hooks, no cheap wire. Simple, solid, done."

remaining stock from collection

"i've got houses that have been occupied for over 20 years"

Earl opens a drawer and pulls out a battered composition notebook. In it, he's documented over the years which of his houses got occupied – and for how long.

 

"This one right here," he taps an entry, "I built in 2002 for my neighbour Dale up on the lane past Bromfield. It's been on the same fence post since then. Blue tits every spring. Every single year. Going on twenty-three years now."

 

He flips further. "Here – the Hartley family over in Church Stretton. Ordered three in 2009. Their daughter emailed me last fall – all three still going. One's got blue tits, one's got a great tit pair, and the third has a wren using it every spring like clockwork."

 

That's not luck. It's the result of untreated hardwood that breathes right, dimensions that actually work, and craftsmanship built to last decades – not one season from a garden centre shelf.

Built to last: A Ridgeline Birdhouse in its natural setting, doing what it was made for.

the end of an era – and one last chance

This spring, Earl is closing his workshop for good.

 

"My hands can't do it anymore," he says, holding them out. They're strong, calloused, but stiff – decades of handwork have taken their toll. The arthritis in his knuckles makes fine work harder every month. "I can still rip a board on the table saw. But the detail work – shaping the entry hole to the exact right size, hand-sanding the interior so there's no splinters for the chicks – I can't do that like I used to."

 

He has no one to pass it on to. "My son's an engineer down in Bristol. My daughter teaches in Norwich. My granddaughter's at Loughborough studying business" He laughs quietly, but there's sadness underneath. "Nobody wants to be a woodworker. I get it. But it means when I'm done, it's done."

 

On his shelves sit the last handcrafted Ridgeline Birdhouses he'll ever make. The final batch. Every one of them finished by his own hands.

"it's not about the money – it's about the birds"

To get the remaining houses into good hands before nesting season, Earl has made an unusual decision: He's letting them go at a steep discount.

 

"I want them in gardens where they're needed. With folks who understand why this matters. Not sitting on a shelf at an antique mall – but actually hanging in a tree, doing what they were made to do."

 

His granddaughter Emma (24) is helping him sell them online. "I don't know the first thing about websites and all that," Earl says with a wave of his hand. "Emma set the whole thing up. She says there's a lot of people out there who want exactly this – they just don't know where to find it."

what makes the ridgeline birdhouse special:

100% handcrafted from solid American hardwood: Each birdhouse is individually sawn, planed, sanded and assembled in Earl's shop – no factory, no assembly line, no overseas manufacturing.

Bird-friendly construction: 1 ¼-inch entry hole, ¾-inch wall thickness, ventilation slots, clean-out panel – every detail is based on 43 years of real-world observation and BTO and RSPB-recommended specifications.

Untreated American white oak: No paint, no stain, no chemicals, no off-gassing – naturally rot-resistant and 100% safe for nesting birds and their chicks.

Built to last decades: Not a disposable seasonal product, but a birdhouse that gets occupied year after year – some for over 20 years and counting.

Predator protection: Extended roof overhang prevents grey squirrels, cats and weasels from reaching into the entry hole from above.

Limited quantity: Only the last Ridgeline Birdhouses from Earl's workshop remain – when they're gone, they're gone for good.

shop the last birdhouse

what customers are saying:

4.8

Over 5,900 houses sold — rated exclusively by verified buyers

Karen P.

April 17, 2026

Verified Customer

"Hung it on the old maple in our garden in October. By early March, a pair of blue tits had already moved in. Now I hear birdsong right outside the kitchen window every morning while I drink my coffee – hadn't had that in years."

33

Jodie C.

April 19, 2026

Verified Customer

"We had two birdhouses from the garden centre hanging in the garden for three years. Not one bird ever went near them. Put up Earl's house and within six weeks we had a pair of great tits nesting. The difference is night and day."

12

Mark T.

April 24, 2026

Verified Customer

"My dad was a finish carpenter for 40 years. He'd have admired this. The joinery, the wood selection, the proportions – everything's dialed in. And the best part: a pair of blue tits had moved straight in within two weeks of hanging it up."

9

Donna W.

May 01, 2026

Verified Customer

"Ordered three – one for our garden, one for my parents in Derbyshire, and one for the neighbors. My husband was like, why don't we just grab one from garden centres? Then he held it in his hands and felt the weight. When I explained why the entry hole size matters so much, he got it. Now he wants a fourth one for the farm."

3

a gift that comes alive

The Ridgeline Birdhouse is more than a garden accessory. It's a gift with real purpose – for bird lovers, gardeners, grandparents who want to show their grandkids how a blue tit family grows up. For the dad who already has everything. For the neighbor who just mentioned she misses hearing birds. Or for yourself – because every spring morning deserves a little birdsong.

"You know what makes my whole year? When somebody sends me a picture of a little blue tit poking its head out of one of my houses. Then I know it worked. The house is in the right spot. And out there, it's a little less quiet."

43 years of craft, a lifetime for the birds.

where can i buy the ridgeline birdhouse?

The original Ridgeline Birdhouse by Earl Calloway is available exclusively through this online store – where his granddaughter Emma manages Earl's small shop. Only here will you find the original Ridgeline Birdhouses. You may find similar-looking birdhouses elsewhere, but they have nothing to do with Earl's 43 years of field-tested, BTO and RSPB-informed design.

only this spring – then it's over

Earl plans to close his workshop for good this spring. "I want every last house in good hands before nesting season hits. After that, I'm done," he says. He looks out the shop window toward the ridgeline. "Forty-three years. It was a good run."

 

If you want one of the original Ridgeline Birdhouses from Earl's final batch, don't wait too long. With the discounted price and spring nesting season right around the corner, the remaining stock won't last.

 

This is the last chance to put a piece of real Shropshire craftsmanship in your garden – and give a bird a home that actually works.

check availability here >>

UPDATE: Earl is officially closing his workshop this spring. To make sure every last Ridgeline Birdhouse finds a home before nesting season ends, he's clearing out his remaining stock at 50% OFF. Once these are gone, there will never be another one. No restock. No next batch. 

 

Check what's still available here >>

Risk-Free: 100% Money-Back Guarantee

Hang the Ridgeline Birdhouse in your garden. Watch what happens. If you're not impressed – by the craftsmanship, the materials, the quality – send it back for a full refund. No questions asked. No hassle.

get your birdhouse now

"I can barely hear the birds anymore" – Why a 74-year-old Shropshire craftsman is selling his last handcrafted birdhouses at a special price before he puts down his tools for good.

IIn the hills of south Shropshire, Tom Aldridge has been building bird boxes by hand for over 40 years. Now the 74-year-old is setting down his carving knife – and saying goodbye with one final collection. Why are these birdhouses so sought-after? Because after this, there will never be another one.

Earl Calloway (74) in his workshop outside Ludlow, Shropshire. After 43 years, he's closing his life's work – and worrying about the birds.

Ludlow, Shropshire – February. The workshop is small. Maybe fifteen by twenty feet, tucked behind the house at the end of a gravel driveway. On the walls hang hand saws, block planes and carving knives – some of them passed down from Earl's father, who built furniture in this same shop until 1979. In the corner sits a cast-iron woodstove that fills the room with dry warmth and the faint smell of cherry wood smoke. On the workbench lie half-finished birdhouses: cleanly planed white oak side panels, tiny roof shingles that he shapes one by one with a drawknife.

 

Earl runs his hand over a piece of wood he's sanding. "You know what gets to me the most?" he asks without looking up. "It ain't the shop. It ain't the stopping. It's that it's getting quieter out there. A little quieter every year."

 

He's talking about the decline of songbirds. And the numbers back him up.

what most homeowners don't realize: the silent decline happening right in our garden

What most people don't know: The UK has lost over 40 million birds since 1970. That's roughly one in three. House sparrows, starlings, song thrushes, spotted flycatchers – species that used to be part of every garden are finding fewer and fewer safe nesting spots. Old-growth trees with natural cavities are being cut down. Hedgerows are replaced by vinyl fences. New construction offers no shelter. Even rural areas are losing habitat at an alarming rate.

"Twenty years ago, I'd open the shop in the morning and it was like a symphony. Blue tits, a song thrush calling from the hedgerow, house sparrows rattling about in the ivy. Now? Some mornings it's dead quiet. And that scares me more than anything."

But what really frustrates him: Most bird boxes you can buy today don't actually help the birds – some even harm them.

"most birdhouses on the market weren't designed with birds in mind"

Earl doesn't hold back when you ask him about garden-centre birdhouses. "People buy them with the best intentions. But a lot of what's sold hasn't been designed around how birds actually behave — and some of it can cause real problems."

 

He lists what he's observed over 43 years:

 

Entry holes that are too large."If the opening is too wide, starlings and great spotted woodpeckers can enlarge it and drive out the smaller birds. Or worse – a grey squirrel can reach right in and wipe out the whole nest. I've seen it happen."

 

Treated or painted wood."A lot of those cheap birdhouses are slathered in paint or stain. Looks real pretty hanging on the fence. But birds are incredibly sensitive to chemical fumes. They won't go near it – or their chicks get sick from the off-gassing."

 

Walls that are too thin."A birdhouse with quarter-inch plywood walls? That's a tent, not a house. In February, the nestlings freeze. In July, over 40°C inside. I've pulled dead chicks out of those things. It ain't right."

 

No ventilation, no drainage."If rainwater gets in and can't drain out, the nest rots. If there's no air moving, parasites pile up. I've cracked open big-box birdhouses after one season that were black with mold and crawling with mites. That's what birds are nesting in."

 

No way to clean them out."After every nesting season, you gotta clean the house out. Old nests are full of parasites. But try opening one of those glued-together houses – you'll break it before you get it open." Earl shakes his head. "Folks mean well. They just don't know what matters. And nobody's telling them."

Every cut is second nature – after 40+ years, Earl knows every grain of the wood by feel.

43 years of watching, a lifetime of learning – how the ridgeline birdhouse was born

Earl never just "built birdhouses." He watched. For decades.

 

"I started when I was in my early thirties, nailing together simple nest boxes for blue tits. Real basic stuff. And then I started paying attention: Which ones get used? Which ones sit empty? Why does a blue tit move into Box A but ignore Box B, even though it's hanging ten feet away on the same tree?"

 

That was the beginning of a decades-long experiment – carried out in the woods behind his property and in neighbours' gardens all across south Shropshire. Earl kept a notebook documenting which houses were occupied and which weren't. He changed dimensions, wood species, hanging heights, entry hole sizes. He talked to birders at the local RSPB group. He read British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) publications. And over the years, he developed a birdhouse based on real observation, not guesswork.

 

The result: the Ridgeline Birdhouse – named after the Long Mynd ridge he sees from his workshop window every morning.

what makes earl's ridgeline birdhouse different from everything else

Every detail has a reason. Not because it looks nicer – but because it works for the birds.

 

Entry hole: exactly 28mm (just over an inch). "That ain't random," says Earl. "One and a quarter inches – perfect for blue tits, great tits, and coal tits — the small hole keeps starlings and house sparrows from taking over. Big enough that they fly in and out easy. But too small for house sparrows and starlings that bully the little guys out. An eighth of an inch either way makes the difference between a full nest and an empty box."

 

Solid, untreated American white oak, 19mm wall thickness. "White oak is naturally rot-resistant – no paint, no stain, no chemicals needed. And three-quarter-inch walls insulate. In winter, the nest holds heat. In summer, nothing turns into an oven. That's the difference between a house that works and one that doesn't."

 

Extended roof overhang. The roof extends well past the entry hole on purpose. "Keeps driving rain out. Blocks direct afternoon sun. And – this is the important part – it stops grey squirrels and cats from reaching down into the hole from above. A flat-roofed birdhouse is an all-you-can-eat buffet for predators."

 

Ventilation slots in the floor. Small, carefully placed openings allow air to circulate and moisture to drain. "No mold, no standing water, no mite nursery."

 

Side-opening clean-out panel. "Pop it open in October, pull out the old nest, give it a quick brush – done. The house lasts for decades this way. Season after season. I've got customers still using houses I built in the nineties."

 

Stainless steel screw eye for hanging. Won't rust, lasts for years, easy to hang on a branch, a post, or a porch beam. "No plastic hooks, no cheap wire. Simple, solid, done."

remaining stock from earl's final collection

"i've got houses that have been occupied for over 20 years"

Earl opens a drawer and pulls out a battered composition notebook. In it, he's documented over the years which of his houses got occupied – and for how long.

 

"This one right here," he taps an entry, "I built in 2002 for my neighbour Dale up on the lane past Bromfield. It's been on the same fence post since then. Blue tits every spring. Every single year. Going on twenty-three years now."

 

He flips further. "Here – the Hartley family over in Church Stretton. Ordered three in 2009. Their daughter emailed me last fall – all three still going. One's got blue tits, one's got a great tit pair, and the third has a wren using it every spring like clockwork."

 

That's not luck. It's the result of untreated hardwood that breathes right, dimensions that actually work, and craftsmanship built to last decadesnot one season from a garden centre shelf.

Built to last: A Ridgeline Birdhouse in its natural setting, doing what it was made for.

the end of an era – and one last chance

This spring, Earl is closing his workshop for good.

 

"My hands can't do it anymore," he says, holding them out. They're strong, calloused, but stiff – decades of handwork have taken their toll. The arthritis in his knuckles makes fine work harder every month. "I can still rip a board on the table saw. But the detail work – shaping the entry hole to the exact right size, hand-sanding the interior so there's no splinters for the chicks – I can't do that like I used to."

 

He has no one to pass it on to. "My son's an engineer down in Bristol. My daughter teaches in Norwich. My granddaughter's at Loughborough studying business" He laughs quietly, but there's sadness underneath. "Nobody wants to be a woodworker. I get it. But it means when I'm done, it's done."

 

On his shelves sit the last handcrafted Ridgeline Birdhouses he'll ever make. The final batch. Every one of them finished by his own hands.

"it's not about the money – it's about the birds"

To get the remaining houses into good hands before nesting season, Earl has made an unusual decision: He's letting them go at a steep discount.

 

"I want them in gardens where they're needed. With folks who understand why this matters. Not sitting on a shelf at an antique mall – but actually hanging in a tree, doing what they were made to do."

 

His granddaughter Emma (24) is helping him sell them online. "I don't know the first thing about websites and all that," Earl says with a wave of his hand. "Emma set the whole thing up. She says there's a lot of people out there who want exactly this – they just don't know where to find it."

what makes the ridgeline birdhouse special:

100% handcrafted from solid American hardwood: Each birdhouse is individually sawn, planed, sanded and assembled in Earl's shop – no factory, no assembly line, no overseas manufacturing.

Bird-friendly construction: 1 ¼-inch entry hole, ¾-inch wall thickness, ventilation slots, clean-out panel – every detail is based on 43 years of real-world observation and BTO and RSPB-recommended specifications.

Untreated American white oak: No paint, no stain, no chemicals, no off-gassing – naturally rot-resistant and 100% safe for nesting birds and their chicks.

Built to last decades: Not a disposable seasonal product, but a birdhouse that gets occupied year after year – some for over 20 years and counting.

Predator protection: Extended roof overhang prevents grey squirrels, cats and weasels from reaching into the entry hole from above.

Limited quantity: Only the last Ridgeline Birdhouses from Earl's workshop remain – when they're gone, they're gone for good.

shop the last birdhouse

what customers are saying:

4.8

Over 5,900 houses sold — rated exclusively by 
verified buyers

Karen P.

April 17, 2026

Verified Customer

"Hung it on the old maple in our garden in October. By early March, a pair of blue tits had already moved in. Now I hear birdsong right outside the kitchen window every morning while I drink my coffee – hadn't had that in years."

33

Jodie C.

April 19, 2026

Verified Customer

"We had two birdhouses from the garden centre hanging in the garden for three years. Not one bird ever went near them. Put up Earl's house and within six weeks we had a pair of great tits nesting. The difference is night and day."

12

Mark T.

April 24, 2026

Verified Customer

"My dad was a finish carpenter for 40 years. He'd have admired this. The joinery, the wood selection, the proportions – everything's dialed in. And the best part: a pair of blue tits had moved straight in within two weeks of hanging it up."

9

Donna W.

May 01, 2026

Verified Customer

"Ordered three – one for our garden, one for my parents in Derbyshire, and one for the neighbors. My husband was like, why don't we just grab one from garden centres? Then he held it in his hands and felt the weight. When I explained why the entry hole size matters so much, he got it. Now he wants a fourth one for the farm."

3

a gift that comes alive

The Ridgeline Birdhouse is more than a garden accessory. It's a gift with real purpose – for bird lovers, gardeners, grandparents who want to show their grandkids how a blue tit family grows up. For the dad who already has everything. For the neighbor who just mentioned she misses hearing birds. Or for yourself – because every spring morning deserves a little birdsong.

"You know what makes my whole year? When somebody sends me a picture of a little blue tit poking its head out of one of my houses. Then I know it worked. The house is in the right spot. And out there, it's a little less quiet."

43 years of craft, a lifetime for the birds.

where can i buy the ridgeline birdhouse?

The original Ridgeline Birdhouse by Earl Calloway is available exclusively through this online store – where his granddaughter Emma manages Earl's small shop. Only here will you find the original Ridgeline Birdhouses. You may find similar-looking birdhouses elsewhere, but they have nothing to do with Earl's 43 years of field-tested, BTO and RSPB-informed design.

only this spring – then it's over

Earl plans to close his workshop for good this spring. "I want every last house in good hands before nesting season hits. After that, I'm done," he says. He looks out the shop window toward the ridgeline. "Forty-three years. It was a good run."

 

If you want one of the original Ridgeline Birdhouses from Earl's final batch, don't wait too long. With the discounted price and spring nesting season right around the corner, the remaining stock won't last.

 

This is the last chance to put a piece of real Shropshire craftsmanship in your garden – and give a bird a home that actually works.

check availability here >>

UPDATE: Earl is officially closing his workshop this spring. To make sure every last Ridgeline Birdhouse finds a home before nesting season ends, he's clearing out his remaining stock at 50% OFF. Once these are gone, there will never be another one. No restock. No next batch. 

 

Check what's still available here >>

Risk-Free: 100% Money-Back Guarantee

Hang the Ridgeline Birdhouse in your garden. Watch what happens. If you're not impressed – by the craftsmanship, the materials, the quality – send it back for a full refund. No questions asked. No hassle.

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