Monday, 13 January 2025

Brisk bidding pushes up auction price of binoculars and telescope formerly owned by Eric Morecambe


In demand - Eric Morecambe's trusty binoculars and case

THE pair of binoculars used  by the late Eric Morecambe for watching birds sold for £750 at a weekend auction  of the comedian's effects.

Brisk bidding took the price way higher than the pre-sale estimate of between £30 and £50.

By today's standards, the bins are nothing special.

They were manufactured by Deraisme of Paris - a brand unfamiliar to most contemporary birders, at least those in the UK.

They were sold in the same lot as their case and two photographs of him looking through them.

The late comedian's 1970s telescope also exceeded expectations, achieving a price of £300 against a pre-sale estimate of between £50 and £70.

Less spectacularly, the hammer came down at £130 for his collection of birds books. This was is in line with the guide price of  £100 and £150.

Included with them was a four-page handwritten letter written to him by  fellow comedian-birdwatcher, Bill Oddie.

The sale was conducted by Hansons Auctioneers over two days, January 10-11.

The French-made binoculars
Above and below, the 1970s telescope


Eric Morecambe's ornithological collection included a copy of The Observer's Book of Birds 



Saturday, 11 January 2025

Opportunity beckons - to become next warden of bird observatory on Alderney Island

                                           

A view through the palm trees on Alderney in the Channel Islands - photo: Andree Stephan via Wikimedia Commons

THE decision of warden John Horton to move on after six years at Alderney Bird Observatory means an opportunity has arisen for a new warden to take over.

Of the vacancy, observatory chairperson Helen McGregor states: "We have a number of ongoing projects which should appeal to candidates.

"We have Motus and NocMig bird-tracking projects to run,  breeding seabirds (including plentiful Gannets) to ring and migrant birds to record in spring and autumn."

The bird observatory was established in 2016 as  the 20th in the British Isles. 


It is positioned on the East Atlantic flyway for birds migrating to and from Africa and rings are fitted to more than 10,000 birds annually.


The observatory is run under accreditation from the Bird Observatories Council.


As its first warden, Mr John Horton oversaw the development of the observatory from its formation. 


He has been appointed warden of Cape Clear Bird Observatory in southern Ireland, and the ABO board is wishing  him every success in his new post.


Anyone interested in the vacancy is asked to send an email to abo.news@outlook.com requesting further information.

                                    

Just off Alderney is an island which hosts more than 5,000 pairs of Gannets

Thursday, 9 January 2025

Outrage over export of endangered eels from British rivers for 'commercial trade' in Russia

Endangered eels from British rivers are being exported to Russia (photo: Sustainable Eel Group)

 
CELEBITY naturalist Chris Packham and the RSPB's operations director James Robinson  are among those who have signed an  open letter condemning exports of eels from Britain to Russia.

The letter states: "Britain has been quietly increasing exports of European eel to Russia over the past few years - from half-a-million juveniles in 2022 to three million in 2024.

"This is despite the fact that the species is endangered, and no river in England and Wales is close to meeting its conservation target. 

"There are now proposals to increase the exports five-fold, to 15 million."

The letter, which has been published in today's edition of The Daily Telegraph, continues:  

"Advocates for this policy maintain there is a surfeit of eels in the Bristol Channel, and that re-routing the stock to Kaliningrad will ensure a greater proportion make it back to the Sargasso Sea to spawn.

"However, the conservation logic is cover for a commercial trade.

"Eels are grown-on in a contained area and eventually harvested for consumption. 

"Yuri Maslov, the director of Kaliningrad’s fisheries agency, is on record as saying that, while the imported fish could theoretically leave Russian waters in several years 'by that time they will have already been caught''.

"Even in times of peace, it would be irresponsible to propose a trade where monitoring procedures are compromised. 


"In the current geopolitical climate, trade with Russia is also surely an issue of national security.


"It would be better for the eel and the elvermen if the Department for the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs pursued a cost-effective programme of  'conservation fishing', catching and re-releasing the juvenile fish into suitable habitat in Britain."


The full list of signatories to the letter is:


Andrew Kerr

Chairman, Sustainable Eel Group


Chris Packham 

Conservationist and presenter of BBC Springwatch


Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall 

Chef, author and broadcaster


Tessa Munt MP (Lib Dem)


Mark Lloyd 

Chief executive, Rivers Trust


Vanessa Becker-Hughes

Eel ambassador and founder of the Somerset Eel Recovery Project


Richard Benwell

Chief executive, Wildlife and Countryside Link


Charlie Burrell

Conservationist and founder, Knepp Wildland


Charles Clover

Co-founder and senior advisor, Blue Marine Foundation


Paul Coulson

Chief executive, Institute for Fisheries Management


Willem Dekker

Former chairman, ICES Working Group Eel


Alastair Driver

Honorary professor of environmental management, University of Exeter


John and Elaine Elkington

Founders, Volans


Mark Everard

Associate professor of ecosystem services, University of the West of England


Richard Fleming

Nature writer


Ben Goldsmith

Former DEFRA non-executive director


Zac Goldsmith

Former minister for climate, environment and energy


Derek Gow

Conservationist and wildlife reintroduction specialist


Rupert de Mauley

Former parliamentary under-secretary, DEFRA


Richard Page

Environmental and marine consultant


Paul Powelsland

Barrister at Lawyers for Nature


Carl Sayer

Professor of geography, University College London


Charles Rangeley

Conservationist and chairman, CaBA Chalk Stream Restoration Group


James Robinson

Chief operating officer, RSPB

Wednesday, 8 January 2025

Gardener Zoe Claymore aims to bring a little patch of ancient rainforest to London at 2025 Chelsea Flower Show

                                                  


This visual by Zoe Claymore offers a pointer to the Rainforest Garden she is preparing  for The Wildlife Trusts for the Chelsea Flower Show (May 24-25, 2025). Her stated aim is "to evoke the lush, wet woodland that once swathed the west coast of the British Isles". The garden will feature birch and alder trees, a small waterfall and boulders, plus mosses, ivy, ferns, bluebells, marsh marigolds and foxgloves. Rainforest now only covers one per cent of Britain, but there are projects to restore it at sites in Cumbria, North Wales and Devon - to the undoubted benefit of birds such as Redstarts and Pied Flycatchers. 

                                       


Monday, 6 January 2025

Is ever-increasing traffic to blame for collapse in England's population of Cuckoos (and possibly Nightingales, too)?

 

Cuckoo - a bird that likes to eat caterpillars but, according to Paul Donald's book, hates to hear traffic 


COULD traffic - especially its noise -  be implicated in the decline in Britain's Cuckoos since the 1960s?

This possibility does not chime  with the more commonly held theory that intensive agriculture has decimated the countryside of the large hairy caterpillars on which the species likes to feed.

Other commentators have suggested that Cuckoos have fared much better in Scotland because these birds take a different migration route - one less prone to drought -  from the one favoured by their English counterparts.

But in his lively  and controversial book, Traffication (a word contrived by him), Paul Donald advances the traffic noise theory that was first  advanced - to modest publicity - by Dutch researchers several years ago.

Donald revisits this suggestion on the basis that, among the few places in England where cuckoos are holding their own are Dartmoor, Salisbury Plain and the Brecks of East Anglia - 'windows of calm' as he describes them.

As such, they are comparable to much of Scotland, where, evidently to the benefit of Cuckoos, traffic is similarly lower than in most parts of Britain.

The author goes on to  maintain that, as well as traffic noise,  moths - and hence their caterpillars - are also likely to be adversely affected both by pollution from vehicle exhaust fumes and by artificial light from cars and roads. 

And that's all to the detriment of Cuckoos.

Donald, formerly the RSPB's principal scientist, goes on to extend his traffic noise theory to the decline in Britain of two other summer -visiting species - the Nightingale and the Turtle Dove.

"These patterns of decline  may have other explanations," he writes. "But surely traffication  demands further attention.

"If we find that the problems facing our vanishing wildlife have their origins in our road system rather than in the vast expanse of the African Sahel or in the global pandemic of climate change, then they become easier to fix.

"Even if turns out that traffic is only a really small part of the problem, reducing its impacts might still throw many species a lifeline.

"One of conservations core paradigms is that reducing one threat to a species usually enables it to cope better with others."

Sections of Traffication are speculative - fanciful even - but credit to the author for his readiness to raise his head above the parapet and court controversy even if it means  treading on the toes of powerful lobbies, not least the automotive industry.

Warming to his argument, he insists:  "The scientific evidence is overwhelming.

"We are blasting our wildlife away with traffic noise, flattening it with cars and poisoning it with exhaust fumes.

"Traffic has sucked the life out of our countryside - we are quite literally 'driving' our wildlife to extinction."

Traffication is published in paperback  at £11.99 by Pelagic Publishing. https://pelagicpublishing.com/

                                                 

'Traffic has sucked the life out of our countryside,' claims the author

Bygone birding: Stone Curlews, Kentish Plovers, Dotterel, Spoonbills and more - a birdwatcher on Romney Marsh

                                          

Lt Boyd Alexander - enthusiastic observer of Dotterel, Stone Curlew and Kentish Plovers in his home county 

Lieutenant Boyd Alexander (16 January 1873 - 2 April 1910) was an officer in the British Army,  an explorer and an ornithologist. Born at Cranbrook in Kent and educated at Radley School and the military college at Sandhurst, he was on a bird-recording mission in Central Africa when he lost his life, aged only 37, in a dispute with natives. On home turf, he was an expert on the birds of his home county, Kent. Below is a colourful and revealing article on the birds of Romney Marsh that Alexander wrote for one of the 1896 editions of a short-lived magazine, The Ornithologist.


“TIMES are not what they were” is a saying that might well be applied to Romney Marsh and its neighbourhood as regards the numerical distribution of species now breeding there as compared with formerly. 

Disturbing influences of one kind and another have come about, which have sadly thinned their numbers. 

Indeed, in the case of the Kentish Plover and Thicknee (Stone Curlew), it well nigh approaches extinction since the Lydd Beach, the breeding resort of these species and of several others besides, has long been threatened. 

                                        

Lydd - one of the area's principal settlements 

This locality can hardly, at the present time, be described as a wilderness or the home of many rare birds. 

The direct causes may be attributed to the increased firing of both artillery and small guns during the height of the breeding season, and also to the Dungeness railway which has opened up a considerable portion of it.

On the other hand, there are portions of the shorelines between Pevensey and Dungeness quite as rich as they were in the visits of summer migrants that pass northward to breed. 

On May 9 (1896), a Temminck’s Stint, female, was obtained in the Pevensey levels, and, during the following day, a number of Bar-tailed Godwits appeared near Rye Harbour. 

Several were shot. 

The last of the godwits was seen on May 28 when a party of five immature birds alighted on the sands at low water.

One of these, a male, was shot. 

This bird was still assuming the pale plumage. 

Several Grey Plover with black breasts were obtained on May 10, and individuals of this species continued to arrive, off and on, up to June 13 when I saw two birds in company with a knot on the Midrip (a series of shallow ponds on the Lydd Beach).

 By the next day,however, all these had disappeared. 

On May 22, a flock of six passed over my head. They were making in a northerly direction. 

A pair of Black-tailed Godwits appeared on the Pevensey levels on May 13. 

This seems somewhat a favourite spot for these birds. 

A pair were obtained in the same place  on May 11 last year.

From May 15 onwards, a number of young herons, covered with undeveloped quills, continually invaded the dykes and shallow pools here in search of eels. 

This is frequently the case during a dry season, like the present one, when the water has become low. 

These birds must chiefly hail, I think, from the heronry at Brede. 

On these partial migrations in search of food, many are shot by the farmers, who esteem them good eating.

The breeding numbers of the Redshank have decidedly decreased here. 

Increased drainage and the dry weather of the last two summers have done a great deal towards the banishment, not only of this species, but especially of the Coot and Little Grebe. 

The Little Grebe is locally known as 'Spider Diver'.

 Many parts of the large dykes and pools, that were, only a few years back, favourite breeding resorts of these three species of birds, have dried up, and are now nothing more than thick reed beds. 

In these reedy places, the Reed Warbler has found a home. 

Any sudden noise will cause this bird to sing vehemently, while the footsteps of a passer-by invariably draws from him a song.

When considering the decrease of the Redshank, the taking of their eggs for eating, by the country people, must not be lightly disregarded. 

The immediate locality of the nest is soon discovered, for no bird, with the exception of the Lapwing, betrays the whereabouts of its nest more readily than does the Redshank. 

It flies overhead in concentric circles, uttering alarm notes, which are for all the world, in tone, like a string of plaintive sobs that become wilder and more heart-rending as the nest is approached. 

A short search will soon find the eggs.

On May 22, a pair of Thicknee Plovers appeared on the Lydd Beach.

 After carefully watching them for some days, I was rewarded in finding their two eggs. 

They had been laid amongst some flowering foxgloves - altogether a pretty site, but, all the same, unhappily selected, since the locality was continually being subjected to artillery fire. 

had hopes of being able to see the young, but after four days of sitting the birds deserted the nest. 

The extraordinary sense of smell possessed by the Thicknee renders a near approach to the nest, without disturbing the bird, difficult.

Of the two species of Tern breeding here, the Common and Little, the latter is by far the most numerous. 

But the numbers of both have sadly diminished of late years. 

Both species keep separate in their breeding haunts, the Little Tern preferring rather the close proximity of the sea. 

The restricted breeding area taken up by the Common Terns is distinctly prejudicial to the safety of their eggs. 

The children of the fishermen and coastguard officers soon discover these spots, and the eggs are robbed right and left for purposes of eating. 

Over these places, sheep have invariably been feeding, and where they have poked their noses, forming small stone-padded hollows, the eggs are more often than not deposited.

On May 21 a nest of the Common Tern was found containing the unusual number of five eggs. 

They were of the reddish-buff variety.

On May 23, I was fortunate enough to discover, with the aid of my field glasses, a pair of Sandwich Terns breeding here.

The birds, however, deserted after the first egg was laid. 

am inclined to think that the Common Terns must have driven

them away. 

A pair of Black Terns were seen on May 24 following the seaboard.

The sandy portions of the Rye Coast attract, now and again, a certain number of Oystercatchers. 

When going northwards to breed, the Oystercatcher makes a rapid journey, rarely tarrying by the way for any length of time like other members of the Scolopacide

On May 29, six of these birds appeared here. 

They shelved into the sand and immediately made for safety along the nearest groyne. 

They bunched themselves up together and remained almost motionless for nearly an hour after which they aroused themselves and began to dabble in the nearest pools. 

Shortly before seven o’clock, one of the birds, presumably the leader, uttered its call-note, whereupon the little flock formed once more into close order and got up like one bird, making in a north-westerly direction. 

A solitary pair of these birds may be found breeding annually on the beach, not far from Dungeness, but it is doubtful whether any young are ever raised.

The presence of the Wheatear here can hardly escape the notice of the most unobservant. 

The curious sites chosen by these birds for their nests, and especially is this the case down here, is no safeguard against intrusion, but rather, if anything, the exact opposite.

It seems to linger in the memory of the bird-nesting boy, with the result that every tin can, kettle or empty shell are zealously turned over and examined, wherein the Wheatear’s treasure is very often found. 

Though the first nest be taken, it is not uncommon to find the same site occupied again for the second lay. 

I came across a nest on the Lydd Beach this summer under a disused pig trough which had been turned over. 

The hole by which the bird gained access to its nest was no larger than that of a mouse. 

Another was found in an empty 4-pounder shell - a pretty example, truly, of peace and war. 

The crevices in the gabion casemates here are also frequently chosen.

 Again, it is not unusual to find the Wheatear’s nest in a depression on the beach. 

In a case like this, dry grass alone is used, the nest resembling then a large edition of the lark’s. 

The normal feather lining is absent, and, in this way, conspicuousness is nicely avoided.

If not disturbed, the Wheatear returns annually to the same nesting site.

The Ringed Plover breeds on the Lydd Beach in fair numbers, and seems to be the least affected of its genus by the artillery practice.

 These noisy little birds course over the beach all day long, uttering their whistling cries. 

Even the Skylarks of the locality have caught their plaintive notes, and they reproduce them amongst their own with startling accuracy.

Four pairs of Kentish Plover bred this season on the beach, not very far from Dungeness Lighthouse. 

                                     

Kentish Plover used to breed in the shadow of Dungeness Lighthouse

The nest of this species is, to my mind, by far the most difficult to find of all the plovers. 

The bird seldom makes any demonstration in the way of a call-note.

It creeps away like a mouse through the dry beach grass, which it resembles so closely in colour. 

To lie down flat on the beach, armed with a good pair of field glasses, is the only chance of success, and then one may be rewarded, after a considerable period of watching, by seeing a little brown thing wending its way back to its nest, stopping now and again, and, when in close proximity of its treasure, standing motionless for many minutes.

When the eggs are hatched, the bird is even still more wary. 

It often drops the food close to the young without even alighting. 

I have found that the male of this species undertakes the sole task of incubation.

On May 29, the first flock of Sanderling appeared. 

They were in full summer dress. 

The female of this species seems more backward in assuming the nuptial dress than the male.

A female out of this flock was obtained with plumage hardly differing from that attained in autumn. 

The last flock of these birds were seen here on June 2.

A pair of Dotterel appeared here on May 29 - a rather late date for this bird. 

They remained in a field of young peas, close to the shore, for several days.

On May 30, two pairs of Common Sandpiper appeared along one of the dykes but disappeared a few days later. 

have searched in vain for the nest of this species in many portions of Kent, and have carefully watched the birds, but they never remained for any length of time in the locality.

The breeding haunts of the Common Sandpiper must be looked for on higher altitudes than are to be found in Kent and Sussex.

June 3 saw a number of Dunlin, with black breasts - a somewhat late date. 

As far as my experience goes, none of the adults remain here during the entire summer. 

When feeding, the Dunlins seem convinced of the justice of the rule, 'share and share alike'.

Extended order is either formed, or, when in flock, the rear portion alternately comes to the front, and in this way each bird partakes equally of what the tide lays bare.

On June 4, I made an expedition to the Hoppen 'petts’ for the purpose of inspecting the colony of Black-headed Gulls.

These 'petts', which lie about four miles south-east of Lydd, consist of two large pieces of water of unknown depth. 

They are, furthermore, fringed with treacherous reed beds which possess all the qualities of a dangerous bog. 

They are also the home of many leeches. 

When within a mile of these 'petts', I could discern numbers of Black-headed Gulls lining the banks and looking like so many lumps of white chalk.

On a nearer approach, they all rose up, full of clamorous consternation - a veritable sea-rookery - and circled above the water. 

They numbered about 200, and at least a quarter of these wore the dress of immaturity. 

I discovered more than 20 nests, all containing eggs, with the exception of two which had young. 

These nests were invariably placed close to the edge of reed bed nearest the water. 

On one small reedy promontory there were no less than eight, situated hardly a yard apart. 

Of late years, this colony of gulls has suffered much persecution, but the owner - Mr. Samson of Lydd - exercises now a strict surveillance over it, with the result that the colony is rallying.

On June 12, a Spoonbill appeared near the Midrips. 

Its appearance created considerable excitement amongst several of the fisher folks. 

I have the following records of the occurrence of the Spoonbill in this locality. 

May 9, 1889, two adult males were shot by two of the Southerden family. 

One of these specimens was subsequently sold to Mr. Gray, of Dover, for £7. 

In June, 1890, a party of five appeared, but, to use the words of the fishermen, " we were too greedy, we wanted the blooming' lot and ended by getting none".

On May 24, 1891, an immature bird was obtained. 

There is also another specimen, still in the possession of the Southerdens, shot some 20 years ago. This is a very perfect one.

The broad suffused rust-coloured ring at the base of the neck is remarkable for its intensity. 

These visits have become fewer and farther between of later years.

The bird now in question was, at the time of its being seen, feeding along with five herons. 

I have also observed this species on the sands in company with gulls.

The shoreline, now (June 16), is a perfect blank, save for a few immature gulls of all sorts who are regular attendants at such times when the tide lays bare the mackerel nets.

They are waiting in the hope of seizing some of the small fry which the fishermen may leave. 

Terns are also there to swell the company, and it is wonderful with what precision they dart into the nets and carry off their prey, while there are others not so bold, who keep out at sea, hovering all the while upon its surface, watching for the floating remnants of small fry which have been washed by the current through the net-meshes.

After these they dart, falling into the water like so many ounces of lead.

On June 16, two Skylarks’ nests were found in a meadow.

They contained four and two eggs respectively, perfectly white, a variety identical with the texture of the Kingfisher’s egg.

The nest of four eggs were quite good, but the others had been deserted.

Appledore, an enchanting  village on the edge of Romney, as it was in the 19th Century