Rocking on
Another good day in the office today in amongst all the grey windy weather. The main highlight was a phone call from the Portuguese Tourist Board’s London office. The good news was that they are up for organising a reader break next spring in Bird Watching Magazine with me leading it. The advertorial will be in the February issue (out in late January 2010).
Dilys Breese Medal
Rain stop play this morning and all plans of visiting The Scrubs. Instead, I sat down to scan the Sunday papers and was surprised to find the birding piece that I have been waiting a while for in the Review section of The Observer. There was a nice picture of me on my patch and the editorial claimed that I actually lived in Wormwood Scrubs!
Stupendous Friday!
82%
The big news today was delivered to me after I had finally finished my Bradford piece and pressed the send button to Sheena Harvey, editor at Bird Watching Magazine. She revealed that a recent online reader survey had revealed that a staggering 82% of respondents thought that my urban birding column was ‘very good/good’. I was gobsmacked! I didn’t realise that my articles were that popular.
Boredom
Bradford
Chickens
I’m in a Bradford hotel awaiting the dawn with the venerable photographer Russell Spencer to explore the city for its urban birding jewels. It looks like we may be in for a struggle because a look at the city map didn’t seem to reveal many green areas that signify an birdy oasis. Even the guide that we’re meeting in the morning seemed a bit scathing of the birding opportunities in the city.
Purple Rain
Talk of purple patches ending were both premature and unfounded. This morning whilst I was in a meeting, fellow Scrubber Anders Price sent me a text to say that he had just found a Woodlark sitting on a path near Chats Paddock. After my meeting I hot footed from Park Lane to The Scrubs in the vain hope of seeing this bird – the third record for Wormwood Scrubs.
The dream is over….
And by dream I mean the amazing run of good birds at The Scrubs, because this morning’s visit resulted in the more usual suspects for this time of year. The Ring Ouzel was nowhere to be seen and no surprise bird jumped out of the woodwork.
My purple patch
The Wormwood Scrubs purple patch continues. Yesterday, I re-found our refueling female Ring Ouzel gorging herself on the still plentiful berries within Chats Paddock plus had 5 Brent Geese fly over from the north. These geese were a site tick, although not totally unexpected because as a species, they are regular though scarce London visitors.
Heaven…… and Hell!
Tower of power
I am knackered.
Fly my way
Reds
I spent this morning partially dreaming of Ouzels and working on my proposed series in BBC Wildlife Magazine which will be a step by step guide to being a birder. It should kickoff in the spring of 2010 as I may have told you before.
More Ouzels!
Alas, they were right…
Oozing Ouzels
I’ve having quite a purple patch at The Scrubs recently.


















