Tom BurgessNorth East and Cumbria

Rick Ingham A close up picture of a wet otter standing on a log surrounded in water with orange leaves floating on the surface.Rick Ingham

The otters have become frequent visitors to the Tees Barrage

A family of otters has been delighting nature photographers and visitors to a river barrage this autumn.

The animals have visited the Tees Barrage in Stockton for the last few years and are becoming a more “common” sighting for visitors.

Mike Lowe, owner of the San Seb Coffee van, said the best time to see the animals “is from now until the end of the year”.

He said: “It is really nice how they attract people to the area and families who have never seen a wild otter get that chance.”

Amateur photographer Rick Ingham, from Thorpe Willoughby, North Yorkshire, has tried to grab a snap of the otters for the last three years.

“It’s been a wind up really,” he said.

“Every time I have been up I have not managed to get them on film.”

Rick Ingham An otter rolling around on a platform at Tees Barrage. It has rolled on to its back with its front paws in the air.Rick Ingham

The otters have been spotted playing both in and out of the water

This year he finally got lucky and captured the otters playing in the water, along with a striking shot of an otter standing on a log surrounded by autumn leaves.

“I got incredibly close and it was one of those photographer dream moments,” he said.

“You are trembling while you are trying to press the shutter.”

Rick Ingham An otter biting into an eel while in the water. The eels body is writhing out of the water.Rick Ingham

The presence of otters are often an indicator of clean water

Steve Ashton, wildlife manager at the Tees Wildlife Trust, said: “Healthy otter populations are often indicators of clean, unpolluted water and it’s another positive indicator of how the Tees has improved over the past few years.

“I was there on Wednesday and there were quite a few people looking out for them.

“I managed to see one myself for the first time in the Tees Valley. I was over the moon.”