Thursday, 25 August 2022

Hopes that new wetland bird site will encourage lapwings to breed again on outskirts of Grimsby

Mitigation site is being created chiefly for benefit of waders

ON the shores of the Humber Estuary outside Grimsby  in North East Lincolnshire, a new man-made haven for wetland wildlife is starting to appear on 35 acres of fields formerly used to grow cereal crops.

It will be known as Novartis Ings - acknowledgement to departing multi-national chemicals giant Novartis which donated the land.

The company left this as its legacy to the local community after manufacturing at the site next door for over 70 years. 

Why is this site being created?

The aim is to provide mitigation habitat for forthcoming industrial development on nearby land which will no longer become hospitable to roosting and breeding waders, wildfowl and other wildlife.

Says designer Roger Wardle: "The site will be providing wet grassland that is in mosaic with a storage lagoon, scrapes, islands and spits with slightly higher points to help the birds spot potential predators.

"The appearance may seem open and bare habitat, but that is just what the waders need."

Water levels will be topped up  from the nearby Mawmbridge Drain just before it would otherwise be discharged into the estuary.

Some of that water will be stored in the lagoon and released in dry times to increase the habitat’s resilience to drought. 

What birds are likely to use the site?

Replies Roger: "Oystercatcher, lapwing, redshank and other waders used to breed in the area but are now very scarce or don’t breed at all locally due to a lack of suitable breeding habitat. 

"This new site, although primarily designed for roosting,  is likely to provide renewed opportunities for lost breeding waders, such as lapwing, to return. 

                                               

Lapwing - will it make a breeding return?

"Pyewipe Estate, just down the road, takes the local name for the lapwing, indicating that in the past they were common in the area.

"As the habitat develops it is hoped that other species will also breed such as ring plover and even  terns if the numbers of gulls is not too high.

"Some islands, especially in the lagoon, will have gravel and shell toppings that benefit wader roosting by simulating natural features associated with the estuary."

"Cattle will be introduced to the site between spring and autumn to help control the vegetation  the target species for this site much preferring short grass or bare ground. 

"The cattle also make large footprints at the water’s edge creating micro-habitats for lots of insects that the birds subsequently feed on, not to mention the large biomass of invertebrates that live on dung pats. 

"The birds will be easily visible from the edges and the sea wall.

"As with all sites like this, we would ask that people respect the site, keep quiet and generally try to reduce bird disturbance.

"Waders can be fickle creatures and flocks are especially vulnerable to disturbance.  

"Once the most nervous bird takes flight, it panics them all. 

"The tall green fencing around the site, in part helps to break up the shape of people and pets."

Ends Roger: "Only time will tell - Novartis Ings  might not be an overnight success.

"However, we are very optimistic that the site will make a significant environmental contribution in conserving the waders of the Humber."

                                           

How arriving birds will see the site as they fly in

Wednesday, 24 August 2022

Rescuers act promptly after reports of attempted 'bird murder' at Cleethorpes Country Park

 

Sign describing why a decision was taken to 'rescue' the  cygnets

TWO young swans have been "taken into care" after "attempted murder" by their parents.

According to a sign posted on  a bridge at the country park, Cleethorpes Wildlife Rescue took action after "multiple" reports that the  adults were trying to drown their own cygnets.

Normally, it is a criminal offence to take birds from the wild and hold them captive, but the 'rescuers' took the view that the welfare of the cygnets was a higher ethical consideration than wildlife legislation. 

They hope their action will prompt donations to further their safeguarding activities.   

It is not known why the swans turned murderous towards their own offspring.

One big happy family - but, alas, things turned sour 

One of the adults turns nasty - but why?


Sunday, 21 August 2022

Book review: The Flow - Rivers, Water and Wildness by Amy-Jane Beer

 


HOW about this for a description of a bird foraging among fallen leaves in autumn?

"Furtive rustles of a blackbird fossicking in the crispy beech leaves: toss and pause, toss and pause - quick movements that appear bad tempered but probably effect a need to listen for danger between bouts of noisy rummaging."

We have all seen such activity and, given the familiarity of the species, probably not deemed it worthy of a second glance.

But to author-observer Amy-Jane Beer, a prose-poet if there ever was/ were one, it provides a magical moment.

Here she is again, this time describing a much smaller and more elusive bird:

"Two impish forms helter-skelter around the trunk of a tree.

"They alight just long enough to glimpse a lick of flame on each head, then off again a dizzy, spiralling chase. Goldcrests!"


Why is that women are able and willing to write so colourfully, but seldom men?


The recently-published book from which these passages are taken is The Flow - Rivers, Water and Wildness.


It is an impressive 400-page exploration of the significance of rivers (and water) in art, literature, science  history, politics, scripture, mythology, folklore and more.


Beer is not, strictly speaking, a birder. She is mistaken in describing dippers as "widespread across the length and breadth of Britain" - they are seldom seen in, for instance, Lincolnshire, East Anglia and the South-east.


But it is easy to forgive an  author who describes so vividly a flock of 60 or 70 lapwings "flying in close formation, then exploding apart as though each bird were suddenly overwhelmed with an urge to freestyle.


"They slew and tumble, scattering across the sky."


Alas, birds figure relatively infrequently in Beer's narrative because she has so much else to cover.


Early on, for instance,  there is an intriguing but all-to-brief section on "atmospheric rivers".


These, she explains, are invisible "gas rivers in the sky - conveyors of moisture across, for example, the Atlantic to the Caribbean, bringing rain to Britain and providing a reminder that a river is not necessarily a bounded entity, merely a ribbon of water in a channel."     

Beer's spotlight also falls on a tragic incident that occurred in August 70 years - a flood in the North Devon town of Lynmouth that claimed 34 lives.

This followed an episode a couple of days earlier when Staines in Middlesex had its heaviest rain in years.

Could either or both be linked to Project Cumulus, an Imperial College-backed experiment in which the RAF had been engaged to spray salt into clouds over Bedfordshire in an attempt to "manipulate" the weather to create rainfall?

Is there a springboard here for more research - and perhaps another book?

It would be a challenge,  not least given, as the author notes, "the alleged disappearance of classified files".

The author's research was far from being desk-only - she travelled extensively all over Britain to talk with a wide range of people and to explore rivers, both wild swimming (her passion) and from on board a kayak.

Around Cambridgeshire and Lincolnshire, she was evidently unimpressed with the extenside man-engineered modifications to the River Welland which she says, most perceptively, "lends a sense of nowhereness to the place".

It was hereabouts, of course, that King John famously lost his treasure - said to have been "sucked down by the whirlpool". It would be interesting to know her take on this famous event in English history - perhaps she is saving that up for a future piece of writing.

The Flow contains another fascinating section in which the author visits the Hogsmill river, near Epsom in Surrey - scene of a famous and disturbing 1852 painting by the Pre-Raphaelite artist, John Everett Millais.

Based on a scene in  Shakespeare's Hamlet, it depicts the floating body of the drowned Ophelia.

 

Beer notes that Millais broke with tradition in painting the river's flow from right to left, "spurning the convention that regarded leftward orientation as literally sinister".


While on the riverbank, she detects two bird that would definitely not have occurred there in Victorian times - little egret and ring-necked parakeet.


Of the former, she writes: "To my eye, egrets  are exotic and reminiscent of improbable assemblages of wildlife adorning religious paintings and trendy wallpaper."


Such is their "angelic whiteness" that she doubts if Millais would have been able to resist including them - plus the parakeets and orange carp - if he were to revisit the same spot today. 


The author has obviously referred to Shakespeare's play to compare the flowers he references in Ophelia's speech with what she sees, but she disregards, either by accident or intent, Millais' depiction of a robin on the left of the painting.


Why did Millais include the bird? In recognition of Ophelia's pre-death utterance: "For bonny sweet Robin is all my joy." 


But the artist is mistaken to have included it. If the playwright had been referring to the bird, he would have used the terminology of the time - "ruddock" or "robin-redbreast".


The line sung by Ophelia would almost certainly have been borrowed from a bawdy song of the day - and, incidentally, a clear indication that she and Hamlet had enjoyed a physical relationship prior to their break-up.   


Any complaints about Beer's book? Just one - the patronising section in which she bosses readers on the need to be sparing with their use of water - "to choose low-volume flush, to wash bedding and clothes less, to use grey and ranwater on garden instead of sending it down the drain . . ."And so on, and so on. 


As if educated readers would not be aware of all this anyway! 


This is such an admirable and stimulating book that it will doubtless and deservedly be reprinted in paperback - but, please, only  after the sermonising has been removed.


The Flow is published by Bloomsbury at £18.99 and is available wherever books are sold.


                                                 

The robin (left) is identifiable, but are there other birds (or hints of birds?) in  Millais' famous painting (which resides in London's excellent Tate Gallery)



Tuesday, 9 August 2022

FEARS THAT INDUSTRIAL PROJECT WILL DESTROY SITE RICH IN SONGBIRDS AND BUTTERFLIES


The proposed development is adjacent to a Northern Powergrid substation and near a Tesco superstore

A DARK cloud suddenly looms over a leafy, bird-rich area in North East Lincolnshire.

The 0.68-hectare site, which is located to the south-east of Hewitt's Avenue in New Waltham, near Cleethorpes, has been earmarked for an energy storage depot.

If approved by North East Lincolnshire Council, this will result in the destruction of an 'unofficial' nature reserve - one rich in songbirds, wildflowers, bats bees, plus butterflies and other pollinating insects.

Its special value is firstly that it is almost totally undisturbed and secondly that it forms a 'bridge' between two other key wildlife habitats - an area of mixed woodland and the Buck Beck.

Among the breeding songbirds are blackcap, chiffchaff, whitethroat and lesser whitethroat.                                       
                                 
Dawn chorus - blackcap in full voice in May

Ornithologists hope that, in time and if undisturbed, it might again provide a breeding location for three species - tree pipit, spotted flycatcher and nightingale - long lost to North East Lincolnshire.

The would-be developer is Harmony Energy plc, a renewables company listed on the Stock Market.

Its intention  is to build a battery energy storage system to provide energy balancing services to the national grid. 

Such facilities seek to take energy from the local grid at times of low consumption and store it until such a time where demand is at peak points, when the stored energy is released back to the grid to supplement the existing capacity. 

                                          
Chiffchaff - another of the site's breeding birds

The company's agent states: "The existing site is considered to have low potential in terms of biodiversity, and no significant environmental effects are anticipated

"The development proposed will not, in our opinion, have any significant environmental effects.

"An attractive landscaping scheme  including tree and hedge planting - will be submitted within the full planning application to help to reduce the aesthetic impact of the development and improve biodiversity." 

However, the company acknowledges that the site is designated Open Countryside and is identified by the Greater Lincolnshire Nature Partnership as holding regional wildlife value and is therefore of Nature Conservation Interest.

The Wryneck says: "The applicant’s agent has either never visited this site or is trying to pull the wool over the eyes of North East Lincolnshire  Council’s planning department. Or both. This patch may only be small but, especially at this time of year, it is a paradise for wildlife - butterflies, wildflowers, bats, birds and more. There may even be a lizard or two. But it is a very fragile habitat. Before proceeding with a full planning application, the applicant should, ideally, seek out an alternative location - one that is  less environmentally sensitive. Failing that, the company needs to be sufficiently responsible both to commission an in-depth ecological survey and to welcome an independent scrutiny of such a survey's findings."

Monday, 1 August 2022

PLUCKY HERRING GULL SEEMS UNAFFECTED BY FREAK GROWTH EMERGING FROM RIGHT EYE


 A curious growth has been detected sprouting from the right eye of one of the juvenile herring gulls that has become an ever-present on the beach at Cleethorpes in North East Lincolnshire over summer. It is not entirely clear if the gull has a right eye or just a socket  Despite the disfigurement, the plucky gull does not seem to be in undue distress and is holding its own against its less disadvantaged compatriots in its daily struggle to find enough scraps to keep the hunger pangs at bay.