MB

 

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Bird articles in newspapers.


Status: Offline
Posts: 2872
Date:
RE: Bird articles in newspapers.


http://www.cntraveller.com/recommended/culture/urban-birding-london-birdwatching/ 

reading this it sounds like we'll be jostling for position with celebs in Horrocks Hide and doing vis mig on the moors in 2017



__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 1713
Date:

An interesting piece on gulls in today's "Independent "

http://edition.independent.co.uk/editions/uk.co.independent.issue.150716/data/7134146/index.html

Shame they refer to them as "Seagulls".

In the same edition, a depressingly familiar article on extinctions.

http://edition.independent.co.uk/editions/uk.co.independent.issue.150716/data/7137516/index.html

__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 1713
Date:

More gloom on climate change, this time penguins. How can anyone deny it?

http://edition.independent.co.uk/editions/uk.co.independent.issue.300616/data/7109756/index.html



__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 1713
Date:

I have thought on a couple of occasions recently what a beautiful bird the goldfinch is, and the fact that they are so commonplace these days means that they are perhaps under-appreciated. Not any more by me, after reading this depressing account

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/organised-crime-finds-a-new-type-of-contraband-goldfinches-a7016676.html

__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 2010
Date:

just been reading last weeks Wigan Observer where they carried a story about a robin catching fish ! wigan photographer Dave Taylor was on a trip to Castle Douglas in Scotland when he spotted a robin with a small fish in it's mouth he saw the robin return several times to a tank filled with small fish the robin jumped in caught a small fish shook it violently and flew off with it repeating the procedure several times, the photo's and story were passed to birdguides magazine and have been sold to a news agency.

__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 4284
Date:

This post got me thinking about a 'recent'-ish event that I have chatted to many customers/birders about, that many didn't know had happened. The Parus major latin name for Great Tit is the only surviving 'old' latin name in the Tit family now as they have been reclassified away from all being Parus. From the current BTO list (  http://www.bto.org/about-birds/birdfacts/british-list ) the following are now correct:

Blue Tit is now Cyanistes caeruleus from Parus caeruleus

Crested Tit is now Lophophanes cristatus from Parus cristatus

Coal Tit is now Periparus ater from Parus ater

Willow Tit is now Poecile montana from Parus montanus

Marsh Tit is now Poecile palustris from Parus palustris

 



__________________
facebook


Status: Offline
Posts: 1713
Date:

It was nice to lift this morning's Independent from the mat and be greeted by half the front page taken up with an image of Parus minor, the Japanese cousin of our Parus major. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/birds-can-speak-in-phrases-and-warn-each-other-of-danger-study-shows-a6919876.html

-- Edited by David Walsh on Wednesday 9th of March 2016 07:56:59 AM

__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 1719
Date:

This morning's Daily Telegraph:
The Metropolitan Police are considering the use of Eagles to bring down drones, now being used by criminal gangs.
This includes drones used in the illegal drug trade.
Met chief Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe has been impressed with similar tactics used by officers in Holland.
A Met spokesman has confirmed this interest.

__________________

 

  
  

Rumworth List 2019, species to date: 63 Latest: Sand Martin, Reed Bunting, Redshank, Pink-footed Goose, Curlew.

 

 



Status: Offline
Posts: 1614
Date:

Given the inclusion of 230 plus SSSI's in the areas allocated for fracking licences, despite Governments 'promises' to the contrary, I doubt local planners will have much say anyway.

__________________
Bus pass birdin' great innit?


Status: Offline
Posts: 82
Date:

Councils will listen, Craig, and sometimes accept advice, but the notion that "...local people decide where developments should and shouldn't go" is a blatant lie. "Mitigation" concessions, where developers pretend to be appeasing objectors, sometimes work, but more often than not, in my experience, they're half-hearted and doomed to fail. As for the Lodge Hill Nightingales, the proposal to "relocate" them near Shoeburyness, fourteen miles away across the Thames Estuary set a new record for daftness by complete dimwits.
Even if a new site had been on Lodge Hill's doorstep, replacing a many centuries-old ecosystem by sticking a few saplings in the ground and probably scattering grass and flower seeds everywhere sums up the lack of nous among the real decision-makers.

__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 1274
Date:

Interesting quote in there in the last line of the article - mention of strict legislation around wildlife and the statement "Our planning reforms also mean councils and local people decide where developments should and shouldnt go.

Really? I think the escapade on the SSSI down Medway where the LA gave permission to build on Lodge Hill - home to a significant Nightingale population - despite advice and protests to the contrary demonstrates that the planning reforms do anything but.

__________________
No one on their death bed ever said they wished they'd spent more time at work. http://bitsnbirds.blogspot.co.uk


Status: Offline
Posts: 1713
Date:

The Wigan Flashes got a mention in the following article in today's Independent, concerning the threat to Willow Tit habitats.

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/nature/willow-tit-under-threat-as-government-make-it-easier-for-developers-to-build-on-disused-mines-10510152.html

All the more reason to get those sightings submitted formally wink

__________________


Status: Offline
Posts: 1719
Date:

Fascinating 2 page article in yesterday's Daily Telegraph (travel section June 14th.):

''To Berlin -strictly for birds''
Over the last decade Goshawks have apparently moved into Berlin in a big way with an estimated 90 breeding
pairs spread across the city
Plenty info. on flights and Birding Berlin tours and Berlin bird books!...

A nice quote ...''Few people would expect to watch a pair of them, from a café terrace in Berlin's arty
Kreuzberg district''...... Sounds like my kind of birding.biggrin
-- Edited by keith mills on Monday 16th of June 2014 08:22:14 PM

__________________

 

  
  

Rumworth List 2019, species to date: 63 Latest: Sand Martin, Reed Bunting, Redshank, Pink-footed Goose, Curlew.

 

 

«First  <  1 2 | Page of 2  sorted by
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

RODIS

 

This forum is dedicated to the memory of Eva Janice McKerchar.