Blog

  • Nature Notes

    At Coate Water. At Coate, on the growing skirts of Swindon, the new housing estate laps against the remnant fabric of the farm where Richard Jefferies, nature writer, journalist, agriculturalist and naturalist was born in 1848. The busy Marlborough Road slides past the old farm wall and its scattered outbuildings; yet by the time Jefferies was […]

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  • Birds of the Night Hill

    As another storm comes through, we shelter in the woods. The laurel leaves are shining with wet and the tree trunks dark with it. We are not alone.  A hare is backed up in the bay between roots of an ash. Its rump pushed against the trunk, a kohl rimmed, lunar-eclipse of a haunted eye […]

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  • Nature Notes

    The Watcher in the Woods. A warm, still night before bed, and I take the lamp out with me for a walk round the stubble field. Several tawny owls are calling, close to, and as far away as my ears can hear them. The ke-wick of both sexes (but mostly female) and the long, tremulous […]

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  • Nature Notes

    A Dip in the Water. It’s not perhaps the first wildlife-activity that springs to mind, mid-winter. But I’ve an article to write (for spring) and I need refreshing – so the girls and I go pond dipping. We take my youngest daughter’s ‘bugnoculars’ (a clever little watertight box with dual magnifying eyepieces on the top), […]

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  • Nature Notes

    Bonfire of the Heart. 2016 marks the twentieth anniversary of the Newbury Bypass protests. Yet it all still feels very raw. I am not going to use this opportunity to go over the whys and wherefores. Nor am I going to defend my point of view, my reasoning, on something that was both intensely local, but […]

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  • Nature Notes

    Winter Song in a Minor Key  Walking into the south wind in this mildest of New Years is like walking through a warm bath. I am in my shirt sleeves. A mistle thrush is singing from the very top of a larch; its plaintive, melancholy song delivered, my son tells me, in a minor key […]

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  • Nature Notes

    Of Love and Stardust. Later on the hill at night, the children and I make the most of a rare clear night during the Geminid meteor shower. The children stand silhouetted on the edge of the curve, ditch and drop of the old grass hill fort. The stars brighten by the minute as our eyes […]

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  • Nature Notes

    Red Kites for Christmas After school, we head for the hanging wood to wait for the kites, the light already bleeding away. My smallest daughter and I pick our way through brambles, disturbing a roebuck lying up under the weatherproofing of the laurel. We find a comfortably shaped tree to lean on. And then the […]

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  • Nature Notes

    The darkness, being double the light. Between sunrise and sunset there are precious few hours now. The dark is double the available light. And in December there are other pressures so, for a while, I am indoors, or dashing about more than I would like to be. The stolen hours out become ever more intoxicating, […]

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  • Nature Notes

    Field Signs. I am scraping through wet leaf litter with some friends. We are looking for hazelnuts nibbled in the precise way a dormouse eats them. We know dormice are present locally and hope to make this wood a better habitat for them. Mooching about, our close-looking is rewarded – not by hazelnuts nibbled in […]

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