• View From the Shed by Shaun Finnie - ONCE IN A LIFETIME

    ONCE IN A LIFETIME

    Like many of you, I keep a year list. For those who don't know, this is a list of every bird that I've seen over the calendar year. It's a harmless way of adding a little self-competition to my birdwatching whereby I try to see more birds on this trip around the sun than the last. This is a great incentive to travel to different locations in search of new birds to add to the list. After all, if I only…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - BACK TO BED

    BACK TO BED

    After last week's somewhat depressing blog ('Save the Whale?' - click the link to read it if you haven't already) it's time to get back to happier things. Thankfully I've got a whole blogful of good news to serve up. Drum roll please....

    RSPB Old Moor's Reedbed Path has now finally reopened!

    It's been fenced off for the entire summer while some of our star species have been making…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - SAVE THE WHALE?

    SAVE THE WHALE?

    Foreword - This week's blog is potentially contravertial so this is as good a time as any to remind readers that all views in these 'Views From The Shed' are my views and mine alone. They may or may not align with the opinions of my workmates, the Old Moor management team or the RSPB as an organisation. 

    And now for our feature presentation...

    Back in the 'seventies us prog rockers were listening…

  • View from the Shed by Shaun Finnie - VIEW FROM A TENT

    VIEW FROM A TENT

    Some of you may have noticed that I've been missing this week from my usual spot at the Old Moor Welcome Shed. Those nice RSPB folks decided that my particular meagre skill-set (that's chatting to people and writing about it) would be better utilised by temporarily representing Old Moor elsewhere, so they sent me on an away day jolly. For just one shift, instead of having a view from a shed, I had a view…

  • Seasonal Update - by Juliette Coloca Residential Volunteer

    Forward - Spike Mayston 

    Juliette is one of two residential volunteers here at RSPB Old Moor. Our residential volunteers give up their valuable time so that they can gain some practical knowledge and experience in managing a nature reserve. Being a residential volunteer is a great way to fill up CVs with professional training qualifications and practical experience so that they can pursue a career in conservation. 

    Indeed…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - PIPER AT THE GATES OF OLD MOOR

    PIPER AT THE GATES OF OLD MOOR

    One of the hardest things any birder will ever do is correctly identify Gulls. Many of the different 'sea gull' species look incredibly similar, apart from during the years that they take to grow up and then they look incredibly different. It's a nightmare and big credit goes to anyone who claims to be an expert. Either that or they're great big fibbers. I know it's not a claim I would ever…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - BIRD BRAIN

    BIRD BRAIN

    Owls are wise. We're taught that from our earliest picture books. “All the cuddly wuddly forest creatures went to the Wise Old Owl. She would know what to do.” You've probably read something like that to your kids or at least seen it in a Disney movie, right?

    Wrong. Owls are stupid, ridiculously so. I've seen owls fly straight into a tree trunk on more than one occasion, they're that dumb…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE SPOONBILL

    THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE SPOONBILL

    I'm really pleased that we have what seems to be a comfortably settled SPOONBILL currently here at RSPB Old Moor. I've written at length about these strange white birds and their ilk before on these blogs and I'm delighted that at least one of them has decided to hang around. The Spoonbill is one of the most striking and exotic birds that visit our shores and for many people…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - THE DOG ATE MY HOMEWORK

    THE DOG ATE MY HOMEWORK

    Come on, admit it. You used the title of this week's blog as an excuse when you were at school, didn't you? Either that or “I left it on the bus, Miss”. These are the two perennial excuses for not doing the required preparatory work before each new school day. They're classics and have passed through the generations. And guess what? Newsflash, kids; the teachers have heard it all before and they…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - A READER LIVES A THOUSAND LIVES

    A READER LIVES A THOUSAND LIVES

    As many of you know, I'm a writer by profession. Words are the tools of my trade and I love them in the same way that my cabinet-maker dad used to love the saws and hammers hanging in his workshop. And just as my dad could never pass any wooden furniture without checking the quality of the joints, I can never pass a bookshop without buying something to add to the 600+ books already waiting…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - TO EVERYTHING THERE IS A SEASON

    TO EVERYTHING THERE IS A SEASON

    There's an ancient Chinese blessing that roughly translates as, “May you live in interesting times”. The twist is that the ancient Chinese people also used the same phrase to curse their enemies. Living in interesting times is not necessarily a good thing. Whichever way you choose to look at it, we are certainly living in interesting times right now.

    As I write this week…

  • View From the Shed by Shaun Finnie - YOU'RE GORGEOUS

    YOU'RE GORGEOUS

    Regular readers will know that I like to put some cultural reference into the title of these blogs every now and again. So today's title relates not only to the creatures we find around our Dearne Valley reserves (and to you, if you need that personal affirmation) but to a local indie band who had a big hit single in 1996 with the title shared with this piece. Give yourself two points if you can remember…

  • View From the Shed by Shaun Finnie - WASHED IN PERSIL

    WASHED IN PERSIL

    There have been some very clean white birds visible at RSPB Old Moor recently. And I mean HIGHLY visible, almost glow-in-the dark white. These birds are so clean that they look like herons that have been washed in Persil (other whiter-than-white washing products are available).

    We love our herons here at Old Moor, especially the small brown booming ones that cause us to close our reed beds off every year…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - CH-CH-CH-CH-CHANGES

    CH-CH-CH-CH-CHANGES

    You may have noticed that the RSPB has recently unveiled its latest logo. The only constant is change, as they say.

    One of the reason that we regularly (if infrequently) update our image is to keep us relevant and in tune with the attitudes of the day. What worked in the 'seventies, for example, doesn't always work now. Just look at some old sitcoms or clothes for proof. We need to get people's thoughts…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - OUR KIDS

    OUR KIDS

    That's what I used to think my Granny was saying whenever she saw a particular flower. “I love our kids”. Well thanks Gran, of course you did. It took me years – I was a slow learner – to realise that what she was actually declaring her love for was flowers of the Orchidaceae family. That's common or garden orchids to you and me, although they're not very common and you won't usually find them in many Barnsley…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - DINNER WITH THE KIDS

    DINNER WITH THE KIDS

    It's a great time to be a lover of nature. Everywhere you look there's new life springing up, be it colourful flowers or leaves on trees, dragonflies hatching and immediately pairing up to mate or parent birds constantly flying from food source to nest, frantically trying to get their young brood up to a weight and size where they can look after themselves.

    Conversely, it's a bad time to be…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - THE DEVIL'S BIRD

    THE DEVIL'S BIRD

    I've mentioned before that my love of words just about matches my love of birds. I'm fascinated by unusual words, why they mean what they do and how they came into being. And they don't come much more weird and wonderful than the word, Onomatopoeia.

    Onomatopoeia roughly means 'a word that sounds like what it relates to'. In bird terms this can be frequently applied to bird names, for example…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - PAYING IT FORWARD

    PAYING IT FORWARD

    This week's View From The Shed is a little different. In this piece I'm not so much looking out of RSPB Old Moor's Welcome Shed as into it. I'm focussing on the volunteers who work there and at lots of other points all around the reserve. You'll easily recognise us, all dressed in blue with the little Avocet logo on our chests. We usually have a name badge too. Don't be afraid to have a chat with us;…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - WHAT'S YOUR FAVOURITE?

    WHAT'S YOUR FAVOURITE?

    We're just about at the end of the Award season in the worlds of the arts. We've had the OSCARS, TONYs, BAFTAs, BRITs and the GRAMMY award ceremonies, where the great and the good of stage, screen and music slap each other on the back and occasionally across the face too. It's all been a lot of fun but also a bit fake as losers put on their best “I'm seething that I lost but the cameras are…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - ON THE WATERFRONT

    ON THE WATERFRONT

    Just about all birds can be described as birds of the air. They fly. Most of them are good at it. A few, like the recently-returned SWIFTS, SWALLOWS and SANDMARTINS are absolute masters of their crafts.

    But birds can be divided into more specialised groups when they land. For example, Passerines are, by definition, perching birds. When not airborne they spend much of their time balancing and clutching…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - NATURE RED IN BEAK AND CLAW

    NATURE RED IN BEAK AND CLAW

    One of the best things about being a Welcome Desk volunteer at RSPB Old Moor is seeing people enjoying themselves. I always make a point of asking if people have had a good time when they leave and almost invariably the answer is a resounding 'Yes'. It's that kind of place. If you want to have a good day out at our reserve, then you probably will.

    My personal favourite is the enthusiasm…

  • David Pritchard's Weird and Wonderful World of Dragonflies

    What Lies Beneath

    Hi, I am David Pritchard and if you have read my Weird and Wonderful World of Dragonflies series of blogs last year, then you know that I am a dragonfly and damselfly nut. I have dedicated over 10 years studying these fantastic creatures and these series of blogs, my photography and the newly created Dragonfly information trail boards at RSPB Old Moor are the result. I sincerely hope that my enthusiasm…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - WHAT COLOUR IS YOUR WAGGING TAIL?

    WHAT COLOUR IS YOUR WAGGING TAIL?

    If you discount the people most close to me, my two passions in life are birds and language. That comes in handy when I'm the writer of a weekly bird blog like this one.

    I love the names that we've given to birds. Many of them are ridiculously descriptive and blindingly obvious. Blackbird. Black Cap. Reed Warbler. Whitethroat. All of them are perfectly named. The words more than…

  • View From The Shed by Shaun Finnie - JUST PASSING THROUGH

    JUST PASSING THROUGH

    Isn't migration wonderful? The mass movement of pretty much every creature in an entire species over many hundreds of miles from one area to another? It boggles my mind that, through the trial and error of evolution, migration has been proven to be the most energy-economic form of survival. If conditions aren't right for feeding and breeding in a certain area at a certain time of year, then the…

  • Wildlife Gardening - Pollinators

    Pollinators are a vastly important sector of creature that improves biodiversity and allows for growth and reproduction of many plants in a given habitat. There are many species of pollinators and they come in all shapes, sizes and colours. Pollinators are hugely responsible for most of the plantlife we have today. A lot of habitats such as Woodland, Scrubland and Marshland rely on pollinators to fertilise other plants…