Tears

There were tears of unabated joy this afternoon. Why? Well, I picked up my computer from my agent’s office that was fixed by my new messiah, Alicia, my web designer. The computer had a seizure last week and as I reported previously, was not responding to treatment only accepting electricity. Now, were are reunited (and it feels so good).

There were further tears though. These tears were of abject sadness. I had to return the D90 SLR so kindly loaned to me by my equipment sponsors Nikon. They said that they needed it back. I did toy with the idea of kidnapping it- or to perhaps running off to some wilderness; just me and the camera. But I felt too tired. I just couldn’t be bothered. Easy come, easy go.
I just had to yet again remind myself that I am a lucky man!

Quick update

My computer is still languishing. Last week it wasn’t responding to treatment but since then it has shown signs that it could be just a case of a hard drive transplant.

So here I am in a hotel in Edinburgh. In the morning I will be on a 3 hour seabird cruise up the Firth of Forth observing the Puffins and whatnoughts for the RSPB. My deadline is next week so I’ll be writing the piece on the train back to London tomorrow night.

More to follow.

Blip

My computer is dying.

I’m sitting here by its bedside remembering happier days. 
Hopefully, it will pull through or maybe I’ll have to buy a new machine.
Either way, I will have to cease blogging for a short while.
We will meet again.

Stake out

A nervous bear steps out of the forest

The sole Wolf that we saw

The Wolf again

A bear retreating

‘Paleface’ the dominate male

Just got back from an amazing trip to Finland. I’m absolutely shattered after spending some 28 hours in the last 48 in a hide watching for bear, wolves and wolverines. 
I will break down the details of this part of the trip tomorrow – I’m sooo knackered!
The above and below are a selection of things I saw.

Female Three-toed Woodpecker

Juvenile Fieldfare

Greenshank

A gorgeous Brown Bear

TUB in the morning after the night before

Hidden gems

A White Wagtail in the Helsinki Sunshine
Due to traveling to the Taiga Forest I had to do without the luxury of internet whilst staying in a hotel completely on my own. There were no guests, no staff and no night as the sun didn’t ever set. More about that in a second.
On my third morning in Helsinki (Wednesday) I broke with the crepuscular tradition and slept from around 1am until 7am. As it was my last morning, I decided last minute to walk 15 minutes, through a nearby park, to catch a boat to an island called Harakka that was described on the tourist map as a ‘nature island’. On the way I picked up a male Pied Flycatcher in the park.
The island was literally minutes away by boat and it really was a little nature reserve. In reality, it was in the hands of the military until as recently as 1988. It’s now managed by the city council and boasted a fairly large breeding colony of Common Gull. It had plenty of stunted bushes, clumps of trees and one side of it faced the Gulf of Helsinki. A classic migrant island. The visitor centre staff although being friendly, didn’t have a clue as to the birds to be found on their own island. I found singing Lesser Whitethroat, Willow Warbler, a Northern Wheatear brood and off shore Eider.
Later, I was on another plane heading north to the Taiga for the bear spotted part of this trip. My first staging post was to stay in a really nice hotel some 80km from where I eventually needed to be. I went for a bike ride at midnight in broad daylight around the immediate vicinity. Picked up more hares and a roding Woodcock. Got back to the hotel at 1am, still in day light and after fannying around for about an hour, I decided to get my head down and this time have a reasonable sleep. That I did and I arose at 8am (late for me these days) and after breakfast met my guide who took me to meet my bear guide – via restaurants (got a female Rustic Bunting in the grounds of one), a husky centre and a carnivore museum.
I will let you know how I got on with the bears in a couple of days.
 

Flying the flag

Lance Armstrong

My little Finnish mate
Last night’s Eagle Owl stakeout was a little weird. I was standing on the 13th floor of a packed hotel terrace pressed up against a rather tall plate glass wall with a bunch of drunken Finnish revelers. I must have cut a sad figure to the guys singing joyously at their tables: a guy on his own with an orange juice in one hand, binoculars in the other peering over the side of the hotel intently staring at the rooftops below. They must have thought that I was contemplating suicide!
I lasted about 90 minutes before giving up the ghost. It probably wasn’t there anyway! I rode back to the nearby hotel on the free bike they supplied. Now let me tell you about this bike. Imagine a girls bike from the 50’s made of wrought iron and weighing more than a small Bison. To cycle on this machine meant that you had to peddle furiously, even on a level road. The moment you stopped cycling the bike would quickly cruise to a standstill. The bike also had no brakes (which took some getting used to) and you had to cycle backwards to stop.
Despite all that, at 2.30am after no sleep, I borrowed the bike and did the c14km round trip to Seurasaari, a forested ‘island’ joined onto the mainland by a thin strip of land. It’s essentially a tourist trap with some interesting examples of ancient architecture dotted around. The interesting thing about the place was that some of the animals seem exceedingly curious. I was wielding my loaned Nikon D90 when I noticed an adult Great Tit feeding an eager juvenile. When it got close enough I slowly raised my camera to start taking some shoots. As I did this the adult noticed me. Instead of moving away it momentarily abandoned its hungry youngster and approached me to look at me. It came so close that I thought it would walk onto my head.
Shortly after, I flushed a Red Squirrel. It ran down the road, stopped, had a think then ran back towards me. It stopped literally 3 feet away from me, had a good look then scampered off. I was beginning think that I had left my flies undone or something!

An immature Long-eared Owl
Moments later, an owl swept into a clearing to land on a branch. Sods law, there was a spray of leaves obscuring its face but judging from the buffy patches on its primaries I guessed that it was a Long-eared Owl. It then leaped onto the woodland floor and was obscured by the long grass for short while. Finally, it re-emerged to land on the branch that I attempted to photograph it on.
What a result!
The journey back to the hotel wasn’t as tortuous as I had thought it would have been. No Lance Armstrong moments were called for. I got back in time for breakfast and to nurse my knackered thigh muscles and saddle sores!

Normal service is resumed

Surely this is a ‘fuscus’ Lesser Black-back?
Phew, it’s been a hectic few days what with Mickey J popping his moccasins, me working my nuts off to finish my debut article for BBC Wildlife magazine plus preparing for and travelling to Helsinki – from where I write this blog. Oh, and I had the worst football game in history on Saturday. We lost something like 10-1!
I arrived in Finland yesterday afternoon and immediately holed myself up in my hotel room until 3am when I finally finished my article on my favourite sites in London. I then had to meet with my guide Hannu Tammelin from Birdlife International Finland who whisked me off to our first urban destination, Hotel Torni just down the road from where I was staying. The idea was not get breakfast, but to stake out a breeding pair of Eagle Owl that can sometimes be seen leaving their rooftop nest site. 
We had no luck, so for the next 10 hours we scooted from site to site picking up mosquito bites, hearing several singing Blyth’s Reed Warblers, a couple River Warblers and Marsh Warblers. We also saw a family party of up to 4 Citrine Wagtails at their breeding area, plenty of Common Rosefinch, singing Icterine Warbler, Caspian Terns, Ruff still in near enough summer plumage, Wood Sandpipers and a distant unidentified eagle sp, that was being mobbed by a gull.
Speaking of which, the Larid of choice around here is definitely Common Gull. There are in the parks and patiently waiting by al fresco tables for tossed morsels. They haven’t quite learnt the evil thieving ways of their larger cousins yet. The Lesser Black-backs here are darker backed with longer wing projection when at rest. They also hold their bodies in a downward slant – almost as if their wings are too heavy for them. Got to be a Baltic Gull, surely?
When I got back to my hotel, hot and knackered, I received an email from BBC Wildlife Magazine saying that they thought my article was great! Yay!

TUB in Helsinki
There was a lot of response to the Swift entry (my last entry). Let’s get out and count those Swifts and help to get them and the House Martins back on their feet (so to speak!).
I’m off for another night time vigil. Firstly, I’m going to stake out that Eagle Owl, then I’m going to cycle around the western outskirts of the city in the wee daylight hours (sunrise is at around 2.45am) to see what I can find. 
Here’s to being crepuscular!

Swifts

Eurasian Swift (J. Sanz)

I’m really into Swifts and I’m quite alarmed about their demise in numbers over the years – down by 47% according to figures released by the RSPB. Over the years, I have actually noticed a slump in numbers. Far less birds are to be found swooping low over the grassland at Wormwood Scrubs than in previous years. I remember tons more Swifts flying around on hot summer days when I was a teenager at school.

And the reason for the decline? A lack of nest sites. We are building structures without the crevices that these birds so love. I just hope that the architects who design new buildings wake up to the opportunity that they have to help hole nesters survive and prosper.
They have enough dangers to face on their long migrations. Let’s get out there and make some holes!

Swift decline

Picture by Kim Dixon
I haven’t been in tip-top condition since the weekend, as I have been suffering from one of my ‘headache-less’ migranes that has rendered me quite hard of hearing. Most sounds I hear grate inside my head. Not pleasant I can assure you.
This morning I arose early and made my way to my patch. It was a beautiful morning and quite hot. Just before 8am I gave a telephone interview for BBC Radio Hereford & Worcester about the demise of the Swift. There was something cool about sitting on a park bench in the sunshine watching and talking about Swifts.
The rest of my day was spent either in a torpor or typing on the computer. I received the itinerary for my Finland trip next week. The first three days will be spent in Helsinki urban birding and then the rest of the week until Sunday will be further north, hopefully spying on Wolverines and Brown Bear.
I can hardly wait.

Beddington surprise

I’ve been off the radar recently industriously working away here at The Urban Birder Factory. I was working on the usual things including TV programme treatments, checking out The Scrubs and general plotting and planning. Throw in a bit of football and a tad of socialising and that’s the sum total of what I’ve been up to.
On Sunday, I continued to visit some of the locations that I plan to write about in my forthcoming BBC Wildlife piece. In the morning, after a brief visit to The Scrubs to film the first of a new series of video blogs that I plan to put on the net, I headed over to relatively nearby Yeading Brook Meadows, some 3 miles up the A40. This area of scrub and woodland is part of a collection of nature reserves along the Hillingdon Trail. This whole area is totally underwatched but quite interesting with breeding Little Owl to its credit.
Later in the afternoon I met with Roger Browne and Peter Alfrey at Beddington (Sewage) Farm for a guided tour. 

Beddington Farm looking north east 

The Croydon skyline as seen from Beddington Farm

Beddington Birders: Roger Browne, Peter Alfrey & TUB
It had changed beyond all recognition to the place I used to bird for a few years during the ’80’s. The guys explained the complicated conservation issues that were at hand – issues that I will raise more comprehensively in my forthcoming article and on my website. 
But in short, there has been some amazing birds found here and the site boasts perhaps the largest Tree Sparrow colony in Britain. Although the owners of the land have good intentions on paper, it seems as though the conservation measures are not being implemented as proposed and instead, the site is being slowly eroded away by construction.
Standing on top of the watch point mound (known by the local birders as Mt Beddington) I could clearly see that this site – which is practically 4 times larger than the London Wetland Centre – was a sleeping colossus. With proper management it would be the best birding site in London by far, in my opinion.
I will keep you updated on this potentially amazing urban paradise.

I love this city!

Canary Wharf – an urban birding hotspot

I got a new bat tick last night. What we thought was a Noctule clicking was re-identified as a Leisler’s Bat. Apparently the first record for my area. Isn’t it amazing what can be found in cities. I must admit that if a Leisler’s Bat flew up to me and slapped me in the face, I probably wouldn’t recognise it – unless I had a bat detector!

Today was spent researching for my BBC Wildlife article on birding sites within London. Last weekend I visited Canary Wharf on the strength of an article I read on Birdguides recently. The author talked about the amazing variety of migrants that turned up in the few trees that lined the tiny gardens at the foot of Canada Wharf Tower (the one with the triangle on top). Unfortunately, I can’t write about it to encourage people to come down for security reasons.
I received a digital SLR from Nikon yesterday, so I also browsed the instruction manual and finally worked out how to turn it on. Tomorrow I will try and take a picture!

Things that go bump…and click

The dark Kensal Green Cemetery catacombs caught in a camera flash

A fairly grey day today, only relieved by the sight of a Peregrine soaring over the A40 near White City that I saw whilst driving to the car wash. Funnily enough, I saw a Peregrine yesterday drifting west over Portobello Road. They are obviously breeding nearby.

Tonight I made my ITV debut on Countrywise (you may remember me talking about shooting it last month). My piece was about the wildlife in Kensal Green Cemetery and how London is a haven for birds. They introduced me as a local hero – which was a bit embarrassing!
Later on, myself, local birder Rob Ayers and ecologist and bat woman extraordinaire Alison Fure aka Indiana Joan went for a nocturnal walk around Kensal Green Cemetery looking for bats, replete with our bat detectors. I had managed to get the company who run the cemetery to entrust me with a set of keys for the site. I had no problem strolling around the cemetery even despite Alison’s stories of paranormal experiences in other London cemeteries. What did spook me slightly was the underground wanderings we had in the musty, cold catacombs. Now that was eerie. We only found one bat dropping in the whole hour plus that we spent down there.
Out in the darkened cemetery we had two species of pipistrelle plus a Noctule as we picked our way across the graves. I’m sure if I’d be wanting to hit the catacombs ever again!

Nice things

This Fur Seal was nowhere near an underground station!

As the Chair of the judges for the Mind The Bird Photographic Competition, I spent a lot of this evening scouring through some amazing images of birds taken near London Underground Stations. Basically, the competition has been organised by the RSPB in partnership with Transport for London and I have to get my votes for each category in by Friday. The official awards day will be July 15th at TfL’s HQ.

I also got a lovely invite to the Isle of Mull from Debby Thorne, the RSPB White-tailed Eagle Information Officer, to traipse up to her part of the world to observe the wildlife, perhaps give a talk and certainly to have a chat. I will be up in Glasgow and Edinburgh in mid July and it’s a shame that I kinda organised it already because it would have been good to travel onwards to Mull. I’m sure that something will be worked out.
Earlier today I had a meeting with my lovely agent Jo for a quick catch up. Afterwards, I hooked up with the equally lovely Alicia, my web designer. I’m relaunching my site soon and she showed me some fabulous designs that were so sexy, that I’m sure when you guys eventually see it you’ll be orgasmic!

Don’t resist it

Desert Wheatear in Korea (Sacha Barbato)

I had a great day today with the main achievement being finishing my Budapest article for Bird Watching Magazine in one sitting – as opposed to a more usual protracted process involving weeks of thinking before typing.

My good friend, Sacha Barbato recent sent me some pictures from his honeymoon in Korea. I was expecting images of the happy couple holding hands walking along idyllic sandy beaches. Instead, I received great images of Baillon’s Crake, Little Bunting and Blur Rock Thrush amongst others. Hence the Desert Wheatear picture. 
I couldn’t resist!

Football in the park

TUB in Kensington Gardens
This morning I lazily got out of bed at 7am and dragged myself down to The Scrubs. I counted at least 13 Common Whitethroat territories in the north western area of the site. Of interest was a solitary Mistle Thrush and a I saw a sole Sand Martin in amongst some swilling Swifts.
Later, I got roped into a game of jumpers-for-goalposts footie with some lads who were friends of friends. As it was just a kick around, I spent my time idly standing in goal listening for calling Great Spotted Woodpeckers and watching the sky.
After football, I headed off in search of birding sites to feature in my BBC Wildlife Magazine piece on London’s birding spots. My polluted, traffic filled journey across London took me to such diverse places as Canary Wharf, Walthamstow Reservoirs and a small public park in Wapping by the Thames.
I will have more journeys to make like that one over the next couple of weeks – that is for sure!

Return of the Skylark?

TUB  (Nadia Attura)

Got slaughtered today at football – 6-2. It was 4-0 after 15 minutes, but to be fair to us, we turned it on during the final quarter of the game by scoring 2 goals. You win some, you lose some.

Yesterday morning, I visited the Scrubs for the first time this month and apart from the usual breeding suspects including observing a couple of lovely Lesser Whitethroats, I saw a distant Little Egret (our 5th record), a female Grey Wagtail and most surprisingly a Skylark (or two). After having our hopes raised in March when a pair settled only to be seemingly discouraged by persistent disturbance, it was a very welcomed sight. The bird I saw flew unflushed out of the grassland as if it was out getting a pint of milk. It seemed as though it had been living at The Scrubs for always. Had our Skylarks remained all this time and are indeed breeding, or was this just a transient bird? It seems hard to believe that they had escaped detection for all this time.
Also, later I spoke with the guy organising the trip to Costa Rica that he wants me to lead. He’s going to send me an itinerary and costings and we’re tentatively talking about an 8 day trip in early December.
Anybody out there interested in going on that trip with me?
Today, I spent time writing my Budapest piece for Bird Watching Magazine and mapping out my article on my favourite sites in London for BBC Wildlife Magazine.
Best get on with it then…..

Costa Rica

Crosstown traffic…….in, er Mexico City!

Whilst London was crippled by the ongoing tube strike, I decided to sit it out at home. Both my book meetings (yesterday and today) were cancelled due to the industrial action. My meeting with A&C Black is now scheduled for tomorrow and we will be discussing an idea that has been on their table now for over nine years – yes, it read it right – nine years!

It’s an idea for a field guide that first came to me when I was perhaps 11 years old. I will break the idea down in more detail if and when I get properly commissioned to do it. It will be a labour of love and there will almost certainly be no money in it. The other idea with the other publisher is far more straight forward. It will probably be called The Urban Birder and I think the title speaks for itself.
My trip to Helsinki has been confirmed for the end of the month. I will spend 3 days wandering the city with a guide looking for owls and other goodies during their perpetual daylight. In fact my guide will be picking me up from my hotel at 3am to start our day. But the bear filming element of my stay looks in doubt as permissions and agreements have to be granted by several sources before Malka (my camera operator) can be allowed to come. The worse case scenario would be that only I would go up to witness this amazing spectacle. I’ll keep you informed.
I got called today by the RSPB who asked me to go to Edinburgh before mid-July to go on a boat ride up the Forth of Firth to watch seabirds. This would be for an article that I would have to write before mid-July for the autumn issue. I thought that by going to Edinburgh it would be a great opportunity to nip across to Glasgow for a couple of days to research for a Bird Watching Magazine urban birding piece. So I got on the phone to the Scottish Tourist Board and within minutes they sent me a press trip form to fill in. Now that’s what I call service!
Finally, I received another email from the tour company that had invited me to Costa Rica. it contained the main guy’s cell number, so I’m going to give him a bell right now.
See ya!

Urban photos

A Peregrine with a unfortunate Feral Pigeon outside Manchester Cathedral (A. Dancy)
An industrious day today. 
I seemed to be getting more and more emails to respond to on a daily basis. They range from Viagra through to various requests and messages from birders keen to let me know what they have seen in their respective urban areas. I also had an invitation to lead a tour in Costa Rica. My first thought was Yowza! But I feel further investigation is needed.
I also got the permission to use the above Peregrine picture. I think it’s such a dramatic urban image. I’d love to gain as many urban pictures as possible for my site. So you if guys have any…….

Out of the woods?

The past couple of days have been quite difficult in that I have had the sudden realisation that I have a lot of work to do in a relatively short period of time. I have a meaty article to write and finish by the end of this month for BBC Wildlife Magazine as well as my Budapest piece for Bird Watching Magazine.

I’ve also got to figure out how to film bears in forests on the Russian/Finnish border. I’ve been invited to Helsinki at the end of the month to write for Bird Watching Magazine then flown further north to spend a few days tracking bears. Don’t get me wrong, it is utterly superb, but I still have to return with an amazing film.
Does David Attenborough have sleepless nights like I do?

I guess I’m moody

I need a hot sauna (Justine Watson)

It’s always nice to come home, back to London the city of my birth. It’s not so nice to come back to a chilly climate, grey skies and rain. It’s hardly inspiring. Today, I set about household chores and replying to emails that should have been replied back to about a thousand years ago. 

For example, I or to be exact ‘someone from The Urban Birder’, was invited by the New York Bird Club to celebrate National Pigeon Day on June 13th in Central Park. Quite what happens on that day I wasn’t sure off. Unfortunately, I will be trapped in my room on that date slaving over a 2000 word article on birding in London for BBC Wildlife Magazine.
I also managed to have a blazing argument with a woman on the phone over nothing. I think it was the tone of her voice that started me off on the warpath. Anyway, after the angry exchange, she sent me a text 5 minutes later to apologise for her part of the disagreement.
Uncharacteristically, I didn’t send her an apologetic text. I thought that I would revel in negativity until tomorrow. I will apologise then.