A cuckoo was calling from the heath today at the Lodge.  I didn't hear it as I was in a meeting - new job, new meetings.  But I did hear one on Bank Holiday Monday  at the Anglo-Saxon burial ground of Sutton Hoo near Woodbridge in Suffolk.  It was my first of spring.  It should signal the hope and optimism that comes after a long hard winter.  But recent declines mean that it can now be a wake up call to the shadow of a future without cuckoos.   Maybe the Anglo-Saxons were on to something in the poem 'The Seafarer': 

"Swylce geac monað 
geomran reorde; 
singeð sumeres weard, 
sorge beodeð 
bitter in breosthord."

(which, for those of you whose Anglo-Saxon is a bit rusty, translates along the lines of... So the cuckoo warns with a sad voice; the guardian of summer sings, bodes a sorrow grevious in the soul.)

But what really struck me on Monday, and on the drive over to the Lodge with a colleague this morning, was the red hue of the meadows.  Sorrel has taken over as the grass has struggled in the heat and dryness of April.

And today we learnt that the dry spell and fires that have broken out across many parts of the UK may be having extremely serious consequences on the population of an already rare bird - the twite.  Up to 40 per cent of its English population may be affected by fires in the north of England.   This could be devastating.  The species is confined to the Peak District and has been reduced to just 100 pairs which nest in small colonies. The bird used to occur much more widely in England, but for a variety of reasons has declined.

The current crisis facing the twite population shows how vulnerable some species can be to 'natural' disasters. The tragedy is that the current situation might undermine some fantastic partnership work that the RSPB has been doing with farmers to look after the haymeadows which provide the habitat for this bird. 

The result of the AV vote can seem a little inconsequential when the natural world is under such pressure.

But politics does matter, which is why I'll return to the results of the elections across the UK later...

Parents
  • Sooty - you are right.  This is the right challenge for all of us - to have a countryside rich in wildlife alongside a sustainable farming industry.  The RSPB has, to be fair, been exploring this for some time - most specifically at Hope Farm where we have been trying to run an arable farm in Carmbridge, in step with others, and turn around the fortunes of farmland birds.  We have had some succes and have been deligthed to demonstrate that we have been able to maintain profits while doubling the number of farmland birds.  But, the challenge you pose is the right one and it's worthy of much further exploration.

Comment
  • Sooty - you are right.  This is the right challenge for all of us - to have a countryside rich in wildlife alongside a sustainable farming industry.  The RSPB has, to be fair, been exploring this for some time - most specifically at Hope Farm where we have been trying to run an arable farm in Carmbridge, in step with others, and turn around the fortunes of farmland birds.  We have had some succes and have been deligthed to demonstrate that we have been able to maintain profits while doubling the number of farmland birds.  But, the challenge you pose is the right one and it's worthy of much further exploration.

Children
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