BBC News NI agriculture and environment correspondent
 
 
 
 
 
Pine martens are among the creatures expected to feature on Winterwatch 2026
‘The perfect location’
Presenters Chris Packham, Michaela 
Strachan and Iolo Williams will be finding out about the latest wildlife
 updates, with red squirrels, pine martens and badgers all expected to 
put in an appearance.
Songbirds like the linnet, goldfinch and redwing are also frequent visitors to the estate for its berries and seeds.
 
Chris Packham, Michaela Strachan and Iolo Williams will present Winterwatch
Jack Bootle, the BBC’s head of specialist
 factual commissioning, said Mount Stewart was “beautiful and teeming 
with wildlife”, making it the “perfect” location for Winterwatch.
“We’re delighted to be working with the 
National Trust and our partners at the Open University to bring this 
amazing part of Northern Ireland to audiences across the UK,” he said.
 
Live cameras
Live cameras will be set up across the site and viewers from across the UK will be able to get involved in the programmes.
“We know how much BBC audiences will 
enjoy getting to see more of Mount Stewart and its wildlife,” said BBC 
Northern Ireland’s director Adam Smyth.
“We are delighted to be working with BBC 
Studios and the Natural History Unit in bringing this large-scale BBC 
outside broadcast to Northern Ireland,” he said.
“It should be a perfect start to the new television year.”
 
Mount Stewart is a popular beauty spot on the Ards Peninsula 
The estate’s general manager, Jenny Ferguson, said her team was “thrilled” to be welcoming the Winterwatch team back in January.
“We are excited to tell more stories 
about the wide range of wildlife which makes their home here on the 
shores of Strangford Lough and across the wider demesne, plus the 
challenges nature and our teams face in adapting to the changing climate
 and more regular and extreme weather events,” she added.