Sunday, 1 September 2019

THE MONTHLY FLYER September 2019


1st September 2019….   The first of the new Era!!  Monthly, not Weekly.

The last 2 weeks have been strange with no longer having to sit down on a Sunday night pondering what the heck I am going to write!!   As it turns out since making the decision on August 11 to “go monthly”, the longer capture spell has disclosed a greater choice of newsy items.

AA (Avian activities) have been minimal, so I’ll start with informative matters.

I mentioned earlier this year that I had embarked on a new volunteering activity at the Allestree community library, as a volunteer librarian. Volunteering in libraries has evolved as Derbyshire Council reduces costs by not employing librarians but utilising the services of community minded volunteers to keep the libraries open for the good of the ratepayers (slight dig!). One good aspect is that affected libraries are intended to become more of a community centre  and not just lending books. That’s a plus.

At Allestree library we have c25 volunteers covering eight ½ day shifts (Tuesday – Friday). As we need 3 volunteers per shift  you can calculate there is not much leeway for absenteeism. Ergo we need  volunteers!!

The  library book computer system holds personal information about borrowers which volunteers (rightly-) have not been able to access.  But from Monday ( and after I have undertaken my short training course) we will use a system which, presumably with appropriate passwords,  will permit volunteers to use book data without accessing customer data.    Then we should be MOTORING!!
Meanwhile until we are all computer trained, we fill our time pulling book request s for other libraries and replacing returned books and hone our skills in knowing whether Mac comes before Mc, and whether a crime novel in large print goes in Crime or Large Print etc etc!

(The recent decision is that we do not differentiate twixt Mc and Mac ..and in the M section, the letter after the c decides the alpha order. Got it?...good!!) 

I’ve probably told you that Mary was a librarian for the BBC  in London, her library duties covering handling tapes and recordings for the BBC World Service.  She was at work the day that President Kennedy was assassinated and recalls the panic and demands for obituaries so that tributes could be broadcasted. The library held many readily prepared obituaries, but at a relatively young age there was very little Kennedy data ready and available for broadcasting. 

As a contrast to book handling I have also enrolled at Crich Tram Museum as a greeter!  It would appear to stem from my enjoyment of spending a brilliant day driving a Liverpool Tram in April thanks to the superb 80th birthday gift from my family.



This is a 116 years old London Tram, and it is NOT me driving…I’m told I’m too old to drive. (That hurts!) Greeter volunteers (there are different volunteers throughout the museum, from driving to engineering and  catering to retail) usually work a full day, for which a hot meal is provided (that’s a bonus!!). Apart from any ad hoc tasks, as a greeter I stand near the Museum entrance alongside a large map, my visual aid, to help and explain what happens when and where, and the best route to enjoy the whole experience.

The 3 most popular questions?   … Toilets?  Cup of Tetley’s? Trams? 

There are several guided tours in the museum area, and a pleasant one-mile scenic walk from the end of the line back to the terminus. I’ve spotted a bird hide en route with nothing to look at and no bird table – that will need more investigating and could be a responsibility I could get into.

And now to the Avian world!!

As promised another cracking photograph courtesy of Julian, which he took in the garden of his house. As he watched a Sparrowhawk sitting on a stone circle it suddenly disappeared into the bushes and emerged to land at the same spot with a Dunnock in its claws. Feathers flew everywhere and the stripped carcass was finally carried away by the Hawk.    However sad, always dramatic to watch.


Tuesday August 13 Chris, Gill and I had the first day for ages doing some bird watching together, where??   at Attenborough of course!! Catching up was probably why we spent the first 45 minutes just batting the breeze.

Gill was recovering from a (successful) cataract op, Christine from International travels to and climbing in the Andes, to Bird Watching in the Galapagos Islands in the Pacific, and me from Gout and apathy, so it was good to get some of the old routine back.

We started at the Sand Martin nest bank where I spotted a Kingfisher near the old Sand Martin bank, an absolute thrill for Chris, because she had not seen one in 2019.   Just to be sure, we saw yet another Kingfisher flash horizontally past the Kingfisher hide spotted more by its jizz rather than an actual id.

Although the Attenborough cafe had run out of Jacket spuds we were rewarded with a prominent Linnet, 3 Little Egrets and plenty of hirundines.

Good news from Carsington. Volunteer Pat has been pressing for some sort of image or logo on the outside wall of the Wildlife Centre so that passers by see it as more than just a brown wooden building, with grass on the roof. Her perseverance has produced results, and Donna, a relatively new F/T ranger has created an excellent Swan image on the outside wall. Not a rare bird but it’s big, it’s well known, and it will draw attention. Well done all round.
            
Just in passing, some 20+ years ago, Severn Trent made a big thing of cutting the grass on the wildlife centre roof. The building has no screws or bolts, the whole building being held together by very tight joints, plus the weight of earth and grass. In about 1999  they organised a small flock of sheep to be placed on the roof to graze the grass, and a volunteer dressed as Mary (Mary had a little lamb!) was in attendance. Publicity was of course the objective, and it did make the local press.

Friday August 16th  Mary and I had a short break at WSM (better known as Weston on the Mud). Total avian species…6.  Had a room upgrade, a free bottle of the driest bottle of Rose we have ever had, and £18 undercharge for parking.    Oh well, some you win, some you lose.

(News break this week…. A police car patrolling the beach at WSM got stuck in  the mud and had to be towed out.  Boys in Blue? Boys with red faces!!)

The visit became quite nostalgic when we encountered a group of aged Rockers singing and dancing down the shopping precinct.   As this montage shows, they were dressed the part, long jackets (men) very full long skirts (with net petticoats – ladies), and many with elaborate hair styles to suit the Rocker era. Apparently there was a Rocker night at a promenade hotel that evening, and they were all well in the mood. Mary and I found ourselves singing (not dancing) with the crowd.





Returning home, had a pleasant bird walk at Idle Valley with Christine and Gill on Tuesday August 20th. 2 hi-lites… the number  of Hirundines over the main lake was just incredible. Mainly Swallows and Sand Martins, and although I thought they had gone by now, there were a good number of Swifts.

After lunch we drove to Chain Bridge lane, and nothing much to see on the wet area. But at the bridge over the river Idle a very helpful birder took us a little way along the river bank until we looked over the wetland area called Tin Holt and he pointed out a couple of young Water Rails which kept emerging from the reeds, then scurrying back to safety. We were some way away, so it was not us that spooked them, maybe just timid.

The helpful birder talked about the better areas to visit in migration time, so we three have scheduled in October 1 to visit the Idle Valley again.

The Friends of Markeaton Park had their Annual garden Festival on the bank holiday weekend and asked me to lead 3 free bird walks.   Result?  In fairness it was record breaking temperatures, and I had no bookings. Frankly I would not have gone birding in that heat!! 

Continuing my “on this day” item, well yesterday anyway, 31st August 1900 (119 years ago!) Coca-Cola first went on sale in the UK.

So endeth the first Monthly Flyer.    Observations or comments welcomed.

Happy Birding

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