Sunday
4th September I
was particularly pleased to see how much media coverage I got for the 2,000th
bird walk booking on this Sunday. We had 5 new people on the walk, and
ironically it was one of them that came out at number 2,000.
Monday
5th September. I mentioned that
Andy Potter from Radio Derby was coming up to do a news item about the walk,
and my plan was to take him in the Kybota round the usual route for the monthly
bird walk. However, I had never driven this little vehicle, which looks like
this but with an enclosed cab.
………………. So I had to have a driving lesson. It’s a bit different, with no clutch and when
you take your foot off the accelerator, it stops. The latter I suppose like
modern cars. but not what I’ve driven. Anyway, I passed Chris’s test, and Andy
did not go through the windscreen.
Tuesday
6th September So
I was up again, this time at 8.45 to meet Andy and we drove (noisily!) to the
outdoor classroom, for a 5-minute chat, followed by a visit to the Wildlife
Centre where Andy had a further chat with Severn Trent volunteer Pat Spencer
about the birds that the public can see there.
If you want to hear the interview, you can Google
BBC Radio Derby, find Andy Potter programme of 6th September, and
listen at your leisure. It is only available for 30 days from the transmission,
so don’t delay. To make it a bit
easier, and to save you trawling through a 3-hour programme, my slot did not
come on until c2.15pm If you move the timer indicator slide to 1hr 17min, you
get my interview, music, and Pat’s interview. There is then another piece of
music, and the next and final few words by Andy are quite amusing, so stay with
it!!
RIGHT, I’m sorry, but I cannot continue to keep a
secret that has been on my mind during the last 2 months. I have to confess
that I have visited a nature reserve where I saw a male Ruddy Duck, so he
(that’s a clue) is in my 2016 count.
People new to birding will probably not
know about the government decreed cull of this species - as I say regularly, ironically
a species that was introduced into the UK, at Slimbridge, by Sir Peter Scott. So they will not realise that, thank goodness, the cull was not 100% and a
Ruddy CAN be found if you know where to look.
Sunday
11th Apart from seeing
25+ Tree Sparrows at the Carsington wildlife centre this morning, I now have to
wait until my trip to Frampton marsh with John and Chris next Tuesday. So let me tell you about my finding of “Big
Birds in Sky” on the computer. Some of you may know the web site
I’m going to talk
about, but I was one that didn’t.
A couple of days ago, Mary and I were imbibing in
the garden and took in some of the aircraft vapour trails. As one often does,
she said “I wonder where they are going…I wish it was me!!” That
evening, I spent some time trying all sorts of word combinations on Google, and
came up with a cracking site which could answer her question.
If you Google in planefinder.net, you will get a
website where, if you click on the section “Airport and Flight Routes”, you
will be presented with a world map covered in aircraft. If you keep watching
the screen, and even zoom in using the + button, you will realise that all the
planes are moving. They are moving on their scheduled flight path, and if you
click on a plane, and you use the simple screen options, you can everything you
could want to know about the flight and the aircraft.
My son flew to Sri Lanka last night at 8.30pm and I
texted him, in flight at 9.30BST.
“This is your captain speaking. Welcome on board
this Airbus A380-300 aircraft, flight number EY18 for Abu Dhabi. We are flying
at a height of 37,000 feet and at a speed of 481knots. Our ETA is 7.20 local
time, and we are 238 miles through a total flight of 3,431 miles. We will
shortly be passing over Luxembourg. Have a nice day.”
…. Hang on, I’ve just seen some lights going over
my house.. it’s just a Ryan Air from Charleroi to Manchester!!
OK, and there is a web site to track Eddie Stobart
Lorries!!
What fun!
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