Henry’s year in images

The conflict between driven grouse shooting and Hen Harriers like Henry (or rather, not very like Henry) is a real one.  Hen Harriers eat enough grouse seriously to reduce grouse bags when they are shot for fun.  Grouse shooting interests illegally kill enough Hen Harriers in the UK to reduce their population to c6-800 pairs…

2015 – a bad year for driven grouse shooting

Few Red Grouse were shot in the UK this year, mainly because of disease and bad weather. But regardless of grouse bags, this was a very bad year for driven grouse shooting and hastened the end of this worthless hobby. The case against driven grouse shooting is that it depends on intensive management that involves…

2015 in the Birdwatch readers’ Blog of the year 2015 – July-Dec

This is the review of the second half of 2015 through the writings of this blog (for Jan-June) – click here for first half of year. July: The Committee on Climate Change criticise the intensive management of grouse moors because of carbon emissions (see here and here). NGOs across the EU rally together to defend…

2015 in the Birdwatch readers’ Blog of the Year – Jan-June

January: I saw a Great Grey Shrike locally (I’d forgotten until I looked back), Defra were hopeless (hardly news, I know), David Harsent won the TS Eliot prize for poetry for a book which included a poem about a killed Hen Harrier, a Scottish gamekeeper was jailed for killing raptors, SNH was put under pressure…

Wicken Fen harriers

I’ve just spent some of the evening at the NT’s Wicken Fen and seen some harriers coming in to roost – and a marvellous Barn Owl going out to feed too. Bearded Tits ‘ping!’-ed in the reeds and Starlings did a small amount of murmurating in the distance. We saw several Marsh Harriers and a…

39+

Last week I went to the Isle of Sheppey and stood on a mound as the light faded. Red-legged Partridges and Pheasants added their non-native voices to that of a Robin (Britain’s favourite bird) as the light faded. Two Green Sandpipers flew up from the channel in front of me and I was pleased that…

What nonsense from Defra

‘Bovine TB eradication strategy delivering results‘ was the headline of a press release issued by Defra on Thursday last week. Defra went on ‘The comprehensive strategy to eradicate bovine TB in England is delivering results with more than half the country on track to be officially free of the disease by the end of this…

Guest blog – Media Circus by Graeme Walker

Graeme Walker is a member of the British Dragonfly Society and a lifelong amateur naturalist. Hailing originally from rural north east England, after several decades living in Buckinghamshire, he moved to Orkney in 2013. Graeme is on the committee of the Orkney Field Club and his main interest is Odonata (though that’s not why he…

Thank you again Chris Packham

I had missed this mention of Inglorious in the Mail on Sunday the weekend before last.  Chris Packham, amongst a host of celebrities, mention a book that they recommend: ‘Most of the UK’s wildlife habitats and many of our species are in critical decline. We’ve lost 50 million birds from our countryside since 1970 so…

An ex-gamekeeper writes…

Having just finished reading your book ‘Inglorious’ I’m prompted, and indeed inspired, to write to you. I’d like to begin by telling you something about my background. Since childhood I have been passionately interested in wildlife, with birdwatching at the fore. I was brought up in the conurbations of Manchester where I was born in…