Saturday 30 August 2014

A Message From Martha

A Message From Martha is the title of a book recently published by Bloomsbury; written by Mark Avery it catalogues the demise of the Passenger Pigeon Ectopistes migratorius. Mark writes that we should remember the passenger pigeon because of the largest-scale human-caused extinction in history. The passenger pigeon is among the most famous of American birds, but not because of its beauty, or its 60-mile-an-hour flight speed. But for its extinction from a population of more than 5 billion birds, in the early to mid 19th century, to zero in 1914. 100 years ago this week, the very last pigeon of her kind died in her cage at the Cincinnati Zoo. Her name was Martha, and her passing merits our close attention today.

Mercilessly slaughtered by the tens of millions at breeding colonies in the Northern USA and at huge wintertime roosts in the South during the post-Civil War era, passenger pigeons were shipped by trainloads to dinner tables in homes and restaurants across the East. Their population fell from biblical numbers at midcentury to tiny, aimless flocks in 1890. By around 1900 the few birds that remained were all in captivity. The last male died in 1910, leaving Martha as a barren relic of past abundance.



Martha was the last to die. She was thought to be 29 years old and had never lived in the wild. She is now in the Smithsonian.

At times I found myself reading Avery's book with a lump in my throat. How could this happen? Or be allowed to happen? The statistics on population size, breeding colonies, roosts and migration flocks are simply mind-boggling, completely dwarfing anything we can see today. The Passenger Pigeon was capable of flying at 60 m.p.h. Imagine a flock recorded as being a mile wide, flying overhead for four hours, blanking out the sun - a flock 240 miles long. It stretches the bounds of credulity. And yet so it was.

John Fitzpatrick of Cornell Lab for Ornithology said: We need to imagine Martha asking us, “Have you learned anything from my passing?” Timely conservation action really does work, even for species that have reached alarmingly low numbers. The word 'timely' though, needs to be emphasised. It is easy to say that the Turtle Dove will not become the new Passenger Pigeon - but can we be sure?

I would suggest that 'A Message From Martha' is required reading for anyone interested in conservation and biodiversity and the inevitable fate of many of our endangered species if we don't act now.

Thursday 28 August 2014

Lunch Club at Bellota's

Our monthly lunch club meetings are calendar days. Time to meet up with old friends, enjoy good food and wine, share anecdotes, discuss books, music, politics, travel and any other subject that takes our fancy. My brother Dave is a legend in musical knowledge, runs a great blog on Live Journal (DavesMusicTank) and is placed currently at No.12 in their list of blogs. No mean feat!

So, here we are again at Bellota's Bar y Tapas in Brighton, our favourite eatery, on a day when the weather was clement and added to the wonderful, convivial atmosphere. Phil had travelled over from Sittingbourne in Kent to join me, my brother and my good friends Graeme, Georgina and Lesley.


Someone referred to this group as 'a bunch of old gits'! That may be so. But we know how to enjoy ourselves. No malingerers here! Mind you, Phil as the youngest member of our esteemed club, would prefer not to be entitled with such a sobriquet!

The food here, as ever, was very tasty. The service was a bit slow today, because Mark - the manager - was having to cope single-handed, owing to being short of staff. He did well and we were in no hurry anyway. Time to dwell over good food, good company and great conversation. And speaking of 'old gits' - here are two at the bar enjoying a Torrés 10 brandy....


Salad days.....

Plans for a Thames Estuary Airport


BTO ecologists have recently reported on controversial proposals to build an airport on the Isle of Grain in the Thames Estuary. The study shows that this development would cause significant loss of coastal habitat within two areas that are protected under European law for their internationally important waterbird populations.

The proposal would cause a significant loss of coastal wetland habitat, largely within the Thames Estuary and Marshes Special Protection Area (SPA), but also affecting the Medway Estuary and Marshes SPA. These areas as already stated are protected under international law for their internationally important bird populations; together they support more than 140,000 waterbirds.

Development at these sites would have significant negative impacts on the bird populations that live there. This would occur through:

1. habitat loss within the footprint of the airport.
2. disturbance or habitat change affecting other areas near the airport.

Over 21,000 waterbirds currently use the area proposed for development. This represents around 25% of the current total bird population on the two affected SPAs and 37% of the current bird population on the Thames Estuary and Marshes SPA.

One can only hope that this alarming proposal does not fly....

Tuesday 26 August 2014

Barn owls 'threatened' by new legislation

Barn owls, red kites and corncrakes could be killed as invasive species under the Infrastructure Bill, claim experts from the Zoological Society of London.


Twenty four experts from the Zoological Society of London and other organisations including the Natural History Museum and University of Oxford, made the warnings in an open letter to the Government about the potential dangers of the bill, which is published in the journal Nature.

Read more about this insanity here: Daily Telegraph 

Monday 25 August 2014

Scottish Independence

I watched the second debate tonight between Alistair Darling and Alex Salmond on BBC2. Both camps entered this evening's debate hoping for a late break of opinion in their favour. Darling wants Scotland to remain a part of the United Kingdom. Salmond wants an independent Scotland, a nation state in its own right.

A Guardian/ICM poll suggested Alistair Darling beat Alex Salmond in the first debate. On tonight's viewing I reckon that Salmond came out on top. This seemed to be confirmed by the audience's reaction.

Much of the argument has been about an independent Scotland's right to retain Sterling as its currency, joining a 'currency union' as it were with England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Sterling is supported by the Bank of England and Scotland would be remiss to turn its back on this safe harbour. But the other UK countries might disagree to such an arrangement. Salmond was challenged throughout the debate by Darling as to what his 'Plan B' was. He did not seem to have one.


The 'debate' descended into the anticipated rhetoric with both sides scoring points on such key issues as currency, the National Health Service, oil revenues, Trident, jobs, the welfare state, etc. etc. etc....

Salmond bases a great deal of Scotland's fiscal future on oil revenues. Depending on which NGO's financial forecasts you care to consider, this could be sound or indeed foolhardy. Salmond places significant trust in these revenues providing 15% of an independent Scottish economy. Darling, on the other hand, said that the revenue figures were alarmingly overstated. And so it went on.

As an Englishman I have no influence whatsoever on the outcome of the Scottish Independence referendum, which takes place in three weeks time. As an Englishman I am tired of listening to Alex Salmond, who clearly dislikes anything British that is not Scottish, who is prepared to turn his back on a United Kingdom that has helped in many ways to provide jobs for thousands of Scottish people. He maintains an arrogant air in front of the camera, with a smug look and a dismissive wave of the arm when Darling says something that challenges Salmond's position on any point. And he has still not come up with a 'Plan B' concerning the currency issue.

So, here's my position Mr Salmond, as an Englishman, who has many Scottish friends. I don't give a fig. Stay in the United Kingdom, leave the United Kingdom. I don't give a fig. I will continue to put my support behind Westminster, the house of government for the United Kingdom. And if the good people of Scotland are convinced with your arguments and vote 'Yes' for independence, I won't loose any sleep over it.

But if Scotland does vote 'Yes' in three weeks time you might just find that a lot of chickens come home to roost.....    

Saturday 23 August 2014

No Post like An Old Post...

Google statistics provide a wealth of information for bloggers about posts, traffic sources, audience, etc. The most read posts tend to be those most recently posted. Makes sense. Why then has an entry I posted on 14th November 2013 rocketed to the top of my Most Read posts list over the last week? Have residents of Grantham suddenly found my blog by sheer coincidence? Or has the limelight suddenly focused on MP Nick Boles? Are there folk out there trying to tell me to 'watch my back'?

Or is it perhaps the badgers that have stimulated this renewed interest in an old blog post?

Curious....


Friday 22 August 2014

Threat to our Raptors

Birds and animals including the red kite, the goshawk, the barn owl and the wild boar could be completely wiped out of the UK if a new bill to encourage the development of infrastructure is passed, a group of leading scientists warned yesterday.

The threat stems from a new definition of the term “non-native species”, which is so broad that it includes native species that died out in the UK but have since been reintroduced. The labelling means that many species, such as the white-tailed eagle, eagle owl and common crane could be placed at risk as they would be classed as non-native.

It is entirely possible that this legislation could be used to eradicate some native species from the UK. Wild boar, beaver and goshawk are particularly vulnerable. If the bill is passed in its current form it could lead to an irreversible loss of native biodiversity. The legislation could also preclude future species reintroductions.

Some non-native species could also be vulnerable because a landowner only needs to prove economic damage to apply for an order to control or eradicate a species.


A magnificent male Goshawk

You can bet your last pound (OK - bottom dollar) that the real impetus behind this proposed legislation is coming from owners of shooting estates and their gamekeepers, wanting to protect stocks of game-birds for their rich clients to blast out of the skies. 

This alarming proposal must be rejected.  

Thursday 21 August 2014

The Honourable Woman - Conclusion

The Honourable Woman has been a fast-paced, labyrinthine thriller set against an international political backdrop. It centred on Nessa Stein whose father was a Zionist arms procurer. As children she and her brother witness his assassination. As an adult, inheriting her father's company, she dramatically inverted its purpose from supplying arms to laying high-spec data cabling networks between Israel and the West Bank. Her sudden appointment to the House of Lords, apparently due to her tireless promotion of projects for reconciliation between the Israelis and Palestinians, created an international political maelstrom.

Each episode carried Nessa's voice-over at the start: "Who can you trust?"


Well, the answer was pretty much "no-one"!  The Americans? MI6? The Israelis? The Palestinians? So much subterfuge, such intricate plotting. Who would be left standing when the dust settled? The suspension of disbelief it sometimes demanded was exhausting.

This was a drama series of the highest order. Absolutely compulsive viewing. Right up there with Broadchurch.

I loved it....

Wednesday 20 August 2014

60 North

60 North is the title of the quarterly publication issued by the Promote Shetland organisation. Not surprisingly the Shetland Islands lie approximately 60º North. Winter days are noticeably shorter than farther south while, in summer, there is no real darkness. In March, a visitor staying for just a week sees the day lengthen by nearly 40 minutes, more than anywhere else in Britain.

Characterised by bare, peat-covered landscapes and a convoluted maze of sea lochs, bays and inlets – or ‘voes’ as they are known, Shetland has a distinctive character and spirit that separates it from the rest of Scotland. As a historic hub of Viking expansion, the Nordic culture is still part of Shetland life. Not least celebrated on the last Tuesday in January with the pagan fire festival of Up Helly Aa, when a full size replica of a Viking longship is set fire to, heralding the return of the sun after a long dark Winter.


And return it does, for one of the great highlights of a visit to these islands is a midnight walk in mid Summer, when you can watch the sun set briefly below the horizon before rising again a short time later. The ‘simmer dim’ twilight of mid Summer adds a touch of timelessness to holidays.

I am planning to visit the Shetland Islands next year.  Shetland is famed for its miniature ponies but it is birds that dominate the islands. Filling the sky and cliff ledges, huge colonies of gannets, guillemots, fulmars and puffins migrate and nest in Shetland, making it an ornithologists paradise. Botanists have around 500 species of plants to discover, and for naturalists there are vast quantities of seals to watch, basking on the rocks, and otters to be seen in the remoter coastal areas. Whales, sharks, dolphins and porpoises can also be seen off the coast.

The one drawback is the cost of getting there. I will need to fly from Gatwick to Edinburgh and then Edinburgh to Sumburgh, situated on Shetland mainland approximately 40 kilometres from Lerwick. The return flight will cost around £600 ($960).

Time to start saving again....

Tuesday 19 August 2014

Collins Bird Guide App

The Collins Bird Guide to the birds of Britain and Europe has been my favourite guide for several years. It is the gold standard of field guides.



It is now available as an iOS app: The Collins Bird Guide App combines world-class illustrations and comprehensive information with intuitive design to create the ultimate field guide for passionate birders and casual birdwatchers alike. The innovative design lets you swipe through over 700 species quickly and intuitively, whether you are at home or in the field. You can use the search tool to quickly identify a bird by location, time of year or attributes.

You can browse through the beautiful illustrations by Killian Mullarney and Dan Zetterström and read the detailed text by Lars Svensson. And you can compare your sighting to a curated list of similar species, expertly arranged for ease of use.

The app costs £12.99 and is worth every penny. For this price you can download onto five iOS devices. I already have it loaded on iPhone 5S, iPad and iPad Mini. The graphics are stunning, particularly on the iPad.

This is, without a doubt, the best app by a country mile for anyone interested in bird identification.

Monday 18 August 2014

Rutland Revisit

The Rutland Birdfair is over for another year. It was as good as ever, better even than last year. Unlike the journey from Sussex to Uppingham. There is no other choice than to follow the route M23 on to M25. There are then choices: M40, M1 or A1M. But the M25 is a nightmare. Slow moving or stationary four lanes of traffic. In places overhead gantry signs instruct to use the hard-shoulder as well, increasing the queue to five lanes...


The journey of little more than 150 miles took five hours. Google's estimation was 2 hours 45 minutes! It was a joy to leave the motorway system and drive country roads through Northamptonshire, Leicestershire and finally Rutland. On arriving at The Crown Inn we dumped our luggage and patronised the bar, consuming pints of Everard's award winning Tiger ale. 


The evening was pleasantly mild so we wandered off to the market square and managed to get a table at the brasserie Don Paddy's where the ale was good and the food was excellent. The cask marque awarded Timothy Taylor's Landlord ale is a terrific pint. A great atmosphere here with friendly staff serving really excellent food.

Wandering around the Birdfair is always enjoyable, often bumping into old friends and wildlife celebrities like Simon King, who had his own marquee:


Essential visits included the optics marquee, the art marquee, the clothing stands of Rohan and Country Innovation and the Shetland stand where I bagged a load of information on these sceptred isles, which I plan to visit before I conk out.

It was another enjoyable weekend and I hope to visit next year again for my 5th visit. Will definitely go by train though as we faced the same horrendous traffic on our return journey...






Thursday 14 August 2014

Just Checking...

Just checking out BlogGo again. If I can get within 4G range in Rutland then I might be able to post from my iPhone or iPad. For what it's worth... ;)

The Honourable Woman - Penultimate Episode

I feel cheated. Just when I thought I was getting to grips with the series - and to be kept on edge and to see how outrageously convoluted its plotting would become, the penultimate  episode  turned everything on its head yet again.

Spoiler if you haven't watched it...

Nessa Stein was back in Israel, shaking the hand of the dastardly Palestinian who blackmailed her into giving him the contract to lay the cabling for her communications network and for a woman who was the target of so many conspiracies..... and the still more shocking parallel plotline in which one of the series’ last remaining reliable characters, Atika revealed herself to be that most pernicious type of turncoat.....

It's an intriguing set up for a no-doubt eventful conclusion. But I, for one, feel this series could have been better with a lot less plot!

Nevertheless, it has been compelling viewing and I will be 'glued to the screen' for the final episode next Thursday.

Ready for Rutland

That's it. Didn't take long to pack. I like to travel light for weekends away and am a big fan of Rohan clothing for birdwatching and trekking. Excellent for layering, windproof, outers often waterproof, lightweight, easy to pack (I roll items for packing, takes up less space and Rohan stuff doesn't wrinkle) will dry in 3-5 hours after a wash and, best of all, does not require ironing.

I will leave early in the morning for the drive to Chailey to meet my colleague, then we will travel onward in his car. The route will be M23, M25 then M1 to Northampton, then the A43 to Kettering, by-pass Corby to our destination at the delightful market town of Uppingham

We will spend Saturday at the Birdfair the main purpose of the trip. And of course there will be two nights at the wonderful Crown Inn the cosy bar, the excellent Everard's ales, the good food and the friendly locals.

I probably won't be posting over the weekend as the mobile and wi-fi signals in this area are virtually non-existent. I will certainly post some photos next week when I get back home.

Wednesday 13 August 2014

Deborah's Theme (Once Upon a Time in America)---Ennio Morricone

A post in my brother's blog reminded me just how wonderful this piece form the film 'Once Upon A Time In America' is. Deborah's Theme, from what is quite simply the most beautiful motion picture score ever composed. It is Ennio Morricone's masterpiece. The breadth and depth of the score remains unsurpassed.

The film, directed by Sergio Leone, will always be one of my favourites. First screened at the Cannes festival in May 1984, many critics showered it with acclaim: "Pungent, haunting, relentlessly personal and enduringly beautiful' enthused the Los Angeles Times. "Epic in its sweep, original in its construction, persuasive in its details...the film never ceases  to enthrall" raved The Hollywood Reporter.

De Niro is such a commanding presence in this fable of crime and history spanning five decades. Full of melancholy, money and violence and above all - failed love.

Once Upon A Time In America is a love story, a multi-faceted jewel that needs to be watched again and again. I have the full uncut 220 minute version on DVD. I shall watch it again soon.

Enjoy Deborah's Theme.......


International Left Handers Day



Facts about International Left-Handers Day

10% of people are left-handed according to a report by Scientific American.
Geniuses are more likely to be left-handed - 20% of the top scoring SAT takers are left-handed.
Of the last 5 US Presidents, 3 were lefties - Obama, Clinton and Bush Sr.
All lefties: Albert Einstein, Bill Gates, Barak Obama, Bill Clinton, Oprah Winfrey, Leonardo da Vinci.

I am:


Have a great International Left Handers Day, and remember:



Tuesday 12 August 2014

Closing time across Britain

The statistics surrounding pub closures continue to be alarming. Pub closures across the United Kingdom have increased to 31 every week according to CAMRA (Campaign for Real Ale), the august body of which I am a member. This number is up from 26 closures per week last year.


Just as disturbing is the fact that planning permission is not required to convert a public house to, for example, a supermarket. Why is that?

The worst hit areas by pub closures are:
  1. London and South East (my locality)
  2. Midlands
  3. North and NE England
  4. NW England
  5. SW England
  6. Lowland and Eastern Scotland
  7. South Wales
  8. Western Scotland
  9. North and Mid Wales
The Campaign for Real Ale hopes to get 55,000 drinkers at the Great British Beer Festival lobbying their MPs to change planning laws. The figures are released as part of Camra's 'Pubs Matter' campaign, which calls on the Government to "recognise that pubs matter" and change the law in England so a planning application is required before a pub is demolished or converted into another use.

As the law stands, pubs may be demolished or converted into supermarkets, estate agents and a range of other uses without planning permission, as many high streets across the country will have experienced. Research by Camra found that two pubs per week were converted to supermarkets in 2012-14.

In addition, Camra research shows that 69 per cent of pub-goers believe that a well-run community pub is as important to community life as a post office, local shop or community centre. Three-quarters of all adults believe that pubs make a valuable contribution to life in Britain.

Pubs do matter, Mr Cameron.....


Monday 11 August 2014

The Bourne Supremacy

I have just watched The Bourne Supremacy, starring Matt Damon,  for the nth time. It was aired tonight on ITV2. There wasn't much else on. I probably watched it for the nth minus one time only a few weeks ago. It has a complicated plot and the strange thing is that every time I watch it I see something new.  And, for the first time, it was like a eureka moment. I finally got the entire story-line.

Just goes to show that repeat viewings are both worthwhile and enjoyable...

Saturday 9 August 2014

Gadhimai - Nepal's Bloody Shame

The world's biggest slaughter festival is due to happen this year in Nepal. The Gadhimai festival (so sickening to even call this massacre a festival) happens once every five years and the most recent occurrence involved the inhumane slaughter of more than a quarter of a million animals.

I am not going to post any of the images I have seen as for most they will be far too distressing. None of these animals would have been stunned before slaughter and many would have faced slow, painful deaths. Animals witnessed others being slaughtered around them whilst waiting for their turn. The levels of suffering and distress are almost unimaginable.

I am a supporter of COMPASSION IN WORLD FARMING who are campaigning to bring an end to the funding Gadhimai receives from the Nepalese Government and end this massacre once and for all.

Nepal's bloody shame....

Friday 8 August 2014

World Cat Day


Friday 8th August is World Cat Day. It was founded in 2002 by the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) and other animal rights groups.

Cats have been associated with humans for at least 9,500 years, and are currently the most popular pet in the world. Owing to their close association with humans, cats are now found almost everywhere in the world. Cats are a common companion animal in Europe and North America, and their worldwide population exceeds 500 million. In 1998 there were around 43 million cats in Western Europe, 33 million in Eastern Europe, 7 million in Japan and 3 million in Australia. A 2007 report stated that about 37 million US households owned cats, with an average of 2.2 cats per household giving a total population of around 82 million. In contrast, there are about 72 million pet dogs in that country.

So, if like me you are owned by a cat or cats, give them a special hug today!

Thursday 7 August 2014

The Honourable Woman Part 6

Plot, counterplot. Drama, melodrama. Confusing. 'Sniffers' on telecommunication lines. 'Sniffer' on sniffer. Who is harvesting the data and selling it to whom? Who is 'sniffing' the sniffing device? And it turns out Shlomo Zahary, the only person both Nessa and Ephra feel any kind of family affection for is, in fact, some kind of Scooby Doo villain. And Atika is shagged by Ephra and Nessa puts herself about to be raped - again. WTF is going on?


Andrew Buchan plays Ephra Stein, the keeper of secrets

Mesmerising as this series is, I need hot, black coffee to keep my concentration level on high alert. It's confounding, it's perplexing, it's frustrating, at times it's bloody irritating - but - it is brilliant! It has grabbed me and it is, at least, as crucial viewing as the first season of Homeland.

And that is saying something....

Mid Summer Colour

Just pottering around the garden this afternoon and thought I would share these:





A flush of colour from the garden.....


Wednesday 6 August 2014

Phil Hollom - one of birdwatching's great pioneers

I was not aware until today that Phil Hollom died in June this year at the age of 102. I never met Phil Hollom but like most serious birders I knew his name. He was a founder member of the BTO and was naturally its oldest member when he died. I had no idea that Phil piloted Wellington bombers during the Second World War.


Phil was a keen birdwatcher from a very young age and was responsible for The Popular Handbook of British Birds that appeared in 1952 and a second volume, The Popular Handbook of Rarer British Birds published in 1960. But the guide that anchored Phil Hollom in the hearts and minds of the birdwatching fraternity was  A Field Guide to the Birds of Britain and Europe that he worked on with Guy Mountfort and Roger Tory Peterson, who produced the paintings. The guide was first published in 1954 and was, and is, a book which gave clear pointers on how to separate similar species, with maps and a succinct text. It was translated into 12 languages, racked up four editions and eighteen reprints. I purchased my copy, a reprint of the Fourth Edition, in 1985, 29 years ago. I still use it today. It contains some of the best bird paintings of any guide I know. 

It is always simply referred to as the Peterson, Mountfort and Hollom. That is what I always call it and any birder will know what you are talking about.

Thank you Phil. R.I.P..... 


Monday 4 August 2014

Me... and one other

I have extinguished  my candle that burned for one hour. I looked from my window, illuminated by a single candle to see how many others in my location had lit a candle with lights out, to commemorate the onset of the Great War. Just one other so far as I could see. Most houses had lights blazing... I am saddened by this. So many people who could not be bothered to recognise the significance of this occasion. How many of them I wonder do not have a distant relation who fell in this pointless war. Look around you at war memorials. So many young men killed in action.

Does it mean nothing to you?

A Single Candle...

..... burns in my window and will do from 10:00pm to 11:00pm. The lights are off in my house as they were 100 years ago. Foreign Secretary Edward Gray said on 4th August 1914: "the lamps are going out all over Europe. We shall not see them lit again in our lifetime". I burn a single candle in my window to commemorate the beginning of the insanity of The Great War, a war that could have been avoided with diplomacy.

A war that cost the lives of so many including my great-uncle, the brother of my maternal grand-mother. Private Sydney Arthur Watts of the East Kent Regiment (The Buffs) killed on the 2nd December 1917 at the Battle of Cambrai. He was 22 years of age.

I have the cap badge of my great-uncle passed on to me by my grandmother many years ago.



It was returned to my family in 1920. I have to reckon it is a facsimile as his remains were never identified and  probably buried on the battlefield. His name appears on The CAMBRAI MEMORIAL that commemorates more than 7,000 servicemen of the United Kingdom and South Africa who died in the Battle of Cambrai in November and December 1917 and whose graves are not known. Nevertheless, the cap badge is a treasured possession.


The Cambrai Memorial

My candle burns for you, great-uncle Sydney Arthur Watts.....

Sunday 3 August 2014

Location, Location...

The cottage we have booked for a late September break is situated at Rye Harbour and overlooks Rye Harbour Nature Reserve . Perfect for autumnal walks and bird-watching. One other bonus: Harbour Lights cottage is just a few doors away from the William the Conqueror pub, a Shepherd Neame house.


Shepherd Neame is Britain's oldest brewer, based in Faversham, Kent since 1698 and brews a range of quintessentially Kentish ales including Spitfire  Bishops Finger and Master Brew as well as award-winning lagers, including Samuel Adams Boston Lager and Asahi. Being a Man of Kent and a lover of fine ales I find this most acceptable.

All I need to do now is tell my wife....

Saturday 2 August 2014

Robert Farnon - Manhattan Playboy (1959)

This piece for me epitomises London in the swinging sixties, even though it's entitled Manhattan Playboy! This is an exuberant composition by Robert Farnon and conjures up images of Carnaby Street when I was a young man (I know, that was a few years ago now!) Jean Shrimpton was considered the symbol of Swinging London, while Twiggy was named The Face of 1966. Mary Quant herself was the undisputed queen of the group known as The Chelsea Set, a hard-partying, socially eclectic mix of largely idle ‘toffs’ and talented working-class movers and shakers. And then there was me - a young man who loved the good life (and still does) and was captivated by such delightful music.

Take a listen and see what you think. If you are my age that is.......


British Birds

Those lovely people at British Birds have just sent out the August 2014 edition of the journal (a must for any keen ornithologist) and included the full 80 page Official Programme 2014 to Birdfair which means that I can plan my visit well in advance rather than having to buy a copy on the day.

This will be the 26th annual Birdfair and this will be my fourth visit, staying as usual at the wonderful Crown Inn, Uppingham which has won many awards for the traditional ales it serves including Tiger Best Bitter brewed by Everards and serves excellent pub grub. I don't know what I look forward to most - the visit to the Birdfair or the Crown Inn!

Simon King Wildlife is an associate sponsor of Birdfair and I look forward to meeting him again along with many other personalities from the world of bird-watching and wildlife conservation. Simon King has worked in the field of natural history film making for over 30 years. He is the creator and presenter of many award-winning productions including Springwatch, Big Cat Diary, Planet Earth and Blue Planet. Simon is current president of the Wildlife Trusts.


Simon King

This year Birdfair has added a new Authors' Wildlife Forum Marquee offering the chance to meet the authors of some of this year's top titles. 

I just need to be careful not to splash out too much cash; easily done here particularly in the optics marquee. Nevertheless I shall have to take a look here: www.swarovskioptic.com and here: www.hawkeoptics.com .....

Hen Harrier Day


Join our thunderclap on Sunday 10th August, show your support for the Hen Harrier, more information here: http://birdersagainst.org/hen-harrier-day-overview/

Hen Harrier Day is organised and co-ordinated by a coalition of Birders Against Wildlife Crime, former RSPB Conservation Director and leading activist Mark Avery, broadcaster and conservationist Chris Packham, the country’s leading wildlife charity the RSPB, and the North West Raptor Protection Group.

Hen Harrier Day has attracted support from a wide selection of organisations and activists, including the Wildlife Trusts, the National Trust, the Hawk and Owl Trust, the League Against Cruel Sports, the Peak District National Park, South West Peregrine Group, Birdwatch magazine, Rare Bird Alert, Bird Information, Birdguides, Welsh Ornithological Society and Quaker Concern for Animals.


Friday 1 August 2014

Ineo by Terje Rypdal

My brother posted this on his blog this evening. I had heard of the composer Terje Rypdal (born 23 August 1947 in Oslo) a Norwegian guitarist and composer but I had not listened to any of his music. Most of his music has been released on albums of the German record label ECM.

This piece, Ineo, is 18 minutes long (and not 26:10 as the YouTube clip indicates) and is a beautiful composition of quietly contemplative music that just gets under your skin. Fill your glass, don your headphones, sit back in a quiet room, or on a beach as it darkens, or above Oslo fjord - and listen to something quite exquisite....

If it flies, it dies

Chilling words aren't they? This is the Maltese hunter's chilling motto: "If it flies, it dies". Here is my opinion, morons of Malta: the wanton massacre of migrant birds is an act of desecration and sacrilege. It is not a sport or a tradition - it is mass murder. And many of the millions of birds you shoot are not killed. They are maimed and die agonising, slow deaths. You so called 'hunters' disgust me. You use our migrating birds for target practice. You don't shoot for food, you shoot for fun. Each year you kill millions of migrant birds as they arrive over Malta, often exhausted and looking for landfall to rest and feed. And then they come into your gunsights. And it shows that you don't give a fuck about the devastation you wreak with this appalling destruction of our wildlife.

Malta is a member of the EU, which has banned Spring Hunting and yet Malta has been granted permission to ignore the law. Why? The 'hunters' claim their traditional right to "harvest" Turtle Doves and Quail, which used to be amongst the commonest migrants. But not any more. I cannot recall the last time I saw a Turtle Dove or heard a Quail calling. No need to wonder why. You monsters shoot anything: hen harriers, marsh harriers, kites, kestrels, black winged stilts, herons - anything that flies.

There is however some hope. The people of Malta want to deal with this issue. Through the hard work of BirdLife Malta a public referendum has been called for, through the gathering of 40,000 signatures on a petition. The weak Maltese government is now looking to hold a referendum in Spring 2015 and this should, if people power wins, bring about a ban.

Bill Oddie visited Malta this Spring and made a film that can be viewed here: http://www.league.org.uk/our-campaigns/shooting/the-shooting-of-migratory-birds-in-malta/film-shooting-of-migratory-birds-in-malta-2014

Please watch this film and then if you can please donate to the cause to stop this cruelty once and for all.

Ben Watt - Forget

I came across this gem of an album purely by chance  and downloaded 'Hendra' from iTunes. This track, "Forget" is my favourite... 'the Sussex Downs after rain falls is as lovely as it gets...'

Ben Watt formed the band Everything But The Girl in 1983 with his long time partner Tracey Thorn. This album Hendra is Watt's first solo studio recording for 30 years. He wrote and recorded with Thorn for 18 years—together they created nine studio albums as Everything but the Girl (EBTG). This solo album contains ten great tracks. Take a listen...


8:59 to Bristol

No, it's not the title of an Agatha Christie mystery; that was '4:50 from Paddington' featuring Miss Jane Marple. The 8:59 to Bristol features my wife Rosalind, who is going to see her family and celebrate her niece's 40th birthday. She is on her way now travelling on First Great Western trains.


And I love train journeys. This one take 3 hours 45 minutes. Me? At home looking after 'the boys' - Oliver and Bertie. Keeping a mindful eye on Oliver who has not been well and is on a course of probiotics. So, it's a boys weekend for me and a fun weekend for Ros.

Do wish I was on the train though....