Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Roll on July 10! It's looking promising for another superb line-up of speakers at Global Birdfair 2026

                                                              

Is that a Wren or is it a Heron? Birders try out the optical gear at a previous Birdfair

WITH the big weekend little more than two months away, the organisers of Global Birdfair have unveiled a taster of  some of the talks that will feature.

Among the speakers on the opening day, Friday July 10, will be old favourites Keith Betton and Martin Kelsey, while the RSPB's Jenny Weston is due to describe the organisation's collaborative efforts to save the Steppe Eagle, an endangered migratory species.

Also likely to be of interest will be a presentation in which Lloyd Scott will discuss the Campaign Against Bird Slaughter's ongoing efforts to halt bird-poaching at bird migration hotspots in the Mediterranean.

Below is a list of some of what has, provisionally, been arranged for the Avocet lecture theatre on Day 1, but much fuller information is on Global Birdfair's own website: Global BirdFair.




Monday, 4 May 2026

Total of 23 Britons - many of them likely to be birders - stranded on virus-stricken cruise ship

                                                                

Worrying time for those on board the MV Hondius and their families at home (photo: Oceanwide Expeditions)

HOW once-in-a-lifetime wildlife-watching  holiday in the Antarctic turned to tragedy remains the subject of intense investigation.

As is being widely reported in international media, three MV Hondius passengers -  a Dutch couple and one German - have lost their lives, reportedly after having contracted a rare virus that is sometimes carried in the droppings or urine of rodents or deer.

Meanwhile, a poorly British passenger has been evacuated and is being treated in the intensive care unit of a private hospital in Johannesburg.

Two of the 70 crew members are also said to be extremely ill with  breathing difficulties.

The MV Hondius is operated by Dutch company Oceanwide Expeditions which specialises in birding and wildlife-watching holidays in  the Antarctic and the Arctic.

It currently has on board a total of 149 passengers and crew  of  23 nationalities  

Since leaving  Ushuaia in Argentina about three weeks ago, the ship  has stopped in mainland Antarctica, the Falkland Islands, South Georgia, Nightingale Island, Tristan, St. Helena, Ascension and Cape Verde while en route to the Canary Islands.

Because of concerns about transmission of the virus, the ship has not been allowed to dock in any port, and has been anchored off the coast of Cape Verde.

In a statement issued earlier today, Oceanwide Expeditions, said: "Local health authorities have visited the vessel and assessed the situation. 

"Oceanwide Expeditions is working closely with local and international authorities, including the World Health Organisation,  relevant embassies and the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs. 

"At the same time, preparations are being made for possible medical repatriation and next steps. 

"The option of sailing on to Las Palmas or Tenerife are being considered to be the gateway for disembarkation, where further medical screening and handling could take place.

"Strict precautionary measures are in process on board, including isolation measures, hygiene protocols and medical monitoring. 

"Oceanwide Expeditions is in close contact with those directly involved and their families, and is providing support where possible.

"We understand the considerable interest and concern and will share new information as soon as it has been verified. "

Below is a list of the nationalities of those on board the ship

                                                            







Will Robert Nicholls' handsome moorland study of Peregrine Falcon fly under the radar at weekend sale?

                                                                     


Has Yorkshire-based auction house Tennants been slightly cautious in estimating a selling price of between just £100 and £150 for this stunning  pastel study of a Peregrine Falcon signed by the Wensleydale-based artist Robert Nicholls?  We thinks bids will go higher before the hammer falls at the sale on Friday May 8. More of the artist's work can be seen at Yorkshire Landscape and Wildlife Artists - Robert Nicholls

                                     


Sunday, 3 May 2026

On the market - the island former Desert Island Discs presenter Kirsty Young and husband share with Ospreys

                                                                

Scenic - the island enjoys an extraordinarily beautiful backdrop

A 103-acre  island home to nesting Ospreys and visiting White-tailed Eagles has been put on the market with a price tag of £3-million.

Former Desert Island Discs presenter Kirsty Young and her businessman husband, Nick Jones, have decided to sell the richly-wooded Inchconnachan Island in Loch Lomond.

It is believed they paid about £1-million for it and its three-bedroom house about five years ago.

                                    

Kirsty Young - her own 'desert island'

The island used to be home to Capercaillies, but, according to the RSPB, they have long since departed - a consequence of predation of eggs and chicks by pine martens, foxes and crows, plus human disturbance.


The Capercaillies - known as 'kings of the forest' - will also have been disadvantaged by the presence of fallow deer and by the introduction, in 1940, of non-native Red-necked Wallabies which may have provided grazing competition and crushed chicks and eggs by their mode of movement. 


What birds are there now on Inchconnachan Island, one of about 10 islands in  Loch Lomond?


Surveys, the last two of which were  carried out on two dates in August 2023, have revealed the presence of the following species:


* Blackbird

* Blue tit

* Carrion crow

* Jackdaw

* Raven

* Chaffinch

* Cormorant

* Dipper

* Dunnock

* Fieldfare

* Goldcrest

* Goosander

* Jay

* Little grebe

* Long-tailed tit

* Mistle thrush

* Redwing

* Robin

* Treecreeper

* Woodcock

* Woodpigeon

* Wren

* Grey wagtail

* Chaffinch

* Goldcrest

* Nuthatch

* Willow warbler

* Siskin

* Osprey


Since last year, there has been planning consent to extend the living accommodation on condition that, prior to the start of development, "a breeding birds protection plan shall be submitted to, and approved in writing by the planning authority" which is Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park. 

The consent also insists on a detailed "protection plan" for nesting Ospreys.

The joint selling agents are Knight Frank (0131 222 9600)  in Edinburgh and Savills (0141 222 5864) in Glasgow.

                               

The trees consist mostly of bird-attracting species such as oak and birch plus Scots Pine

Saturday, 2 May 2026

Newspaper columnist Jeremy Clarkson says farmland sighting of Great Grey Shrike made him 'delirious with joy'

                                          

Great Grey Shrike - a bird that often impales its prey on thorns and barbed wire

NEWSPAPER columnist and broadcaster Jeremy Clarkson has today revealed that a rare Great Grey Shrike that spent part of last year on his farm estate in Oxfordshire.

He kept the sighting under wraps for fear of his land being trampled - and the bird being disturbed - by an influx of twitchers.

Clarkson seldom misses an opportunity to poke fun at birders - and he does so in his column in today's edition of The Sun newspaper.

But, as some who have watched his farming show on Amazon Prime TV have probably long twigged, he is very proud and  protective of the Corn Buntings, Skylarks and other farmland species he regularly sees while at the wheel of his tractor or on walkabout of his fields.

And today, though mindful of announcing it for fear of being "ostracised" by his friends and "cancelled" by his bosses, he confirms that he has become a bona fide birder.

Of his moments watching the visiting shrike as it impaled large insects on barbed wire fences, he writes:  "I was delirious with joy.

"That's cooler than Steve McQueen power-sliding a Ferrari 275 GTS down the Amalfi Coast in Italy."

And does Clarkson have a target species? Apparently, it is one he has never seen before - a Green Woodpecker. 

The truth will out - Clarkson's confession

                                                                           

The revelations come in today's edition of The Sun newspaper

                    




                                                                      

Friday, 1 May 2026

Will a time come when Britain's reservoirs, lakes and lochs are carpeted by solar panels?

                                                           

Pintail (left) and Mallard on a reservoir - this one at Covenham, near Louth, in Lincolnshire

BRITAIN'S ducks and grebes could face an unexpected new pressure.

Political momentum is growing for solar panels to be installed on reservoirs, lakes, lochs  and other expanses of water.

This would bring Britain into line with countries such as China, India and Vietnam where they are commonplace.

Leading the charge is Conservative MP Lincoln Jopp in whose Surrey constituency, Spelthorne, there are four reservoirs, one of which already has a 24-panel solar array providing electricity.

Mr Jopp, a former Army colonel, has banged the drum for such projects in several 'Commons  debates.

In one, he said: "I hope that I will in some way blow the House’s mind with what I am about to say and sow a seed that will grow into something fantastic. 

"Spelthorne is not in Lancashire, nor in Lincolnshire. It is everything south of Heathrow until one gets to the River Thames. 

"Hon. Members from around the House know my constituency well, because it is what they see when they take off from or land at Heathrow airport.

"When I first looked at a map of Spelthorne, I was struck by these four massive blocks of blue, so I looked into them. 

"They are four raised reservoirs, which hold half of London’s drinking water. 

"I was determined to find some way to utilise the total 2,000 acres of these bodies of water. 

"I looked into it a little further, and came upon the concept of floating solar. 

"This is a terribly simple concept: simply take solar panels, attach them to plastic floats, anchor those floats to the bottom of the reservoir and string some wires to take an alternating current from the floating solar panels." 

Mr Jopp's  Conservative colleague, Ben Obese-Jecty, thinks something similar might have potential not just at at Grafham Water in his own Huntingdon constituency but in neighbouring North East Cambridgeshire where plans by Cambridge Water and Anglian Water are advanced for construction, starting in 2029, of  the Fens reservoir.

And this week it has been reported that Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, a renewables enthusiast,  is poised to commission a feasibility study for such ventures across the UK.

The obvious upside is that using reservoirs for solar initiatives might reduce pressure on precious agricultural land.

An added benefit is that the panels are thought, based on data from Australia,  to reduce water evaporation significantly. 

But a downside -  the potential loss of over-wintering habitat for Goldeneye, Smew, Great Crested Grebes and scores of other species - seems, so far, to have been overlooked by parliamentarians.

Says Mr Jopp: "There aren't many people who are going to complain about putting floating solar on raised reservoirs."

Of one of his inspections of the solar array at the Queen Elizabeth II reservoir on his patch, he said he saw nothing "apart from a few swans, a couple of seagulls and a man from the RSPB".


Wednesday, 29 April 2026

King Charles tells President Trump: 'We must reflect on our shared responsibility to safeguard nature'

                                                          

King Charles - 'nature is our most precious and irreplaceable asset'

During this week's visit to the USA, King Charles issued a reminder to his hosts on the importance of nature. As far as President Trump and Vice-president J.D. Vance were concerned, his words, alas, probably fell on deaf ears, but they were greeted warmly by other politicians. This is what the King said in his speech to Congress:


"As we look toward the next 250 years, we must reflect on our shared responsibility to safeguard nature - our most precious and irreplaceable asset.

"Millennia before our nations existed, before any border drawn, the mountains of Scotland and Appalachia were one - a single, continuous range,forged in the ancient collision of continents.

"The natural wonders of the United States of America are indeed a unique asset.

"Generations of Americans have risen to this calling: indigenous, political and civic leaders, people in rural communities and cities alike, have all helped to protect and nurture what President Theodore Roosevelt called 'the glorious heritage' of this land’s extraordinary natural splendour on which so much of its prosperity has always depended.

"Yet, even as we celebrate the beauty that surrounds us, our generation must decide how to address the collapse of critical natural systems which threatens far more than the harmony and essential diversity of nature.

"We ignore at our peril the fact that these natural systems - in other words, nature’s own economy - provide the foundation for our prosperity and our national security."