Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Seen and/or Heard

I like to set out on a walk, as I did this morning, with some sort of purpose in mind. Today it was to count how many different bird species I either saw (S) and/or heard (H) - and I started well with a red kite (S&H) flying above me as I left the house, followed by the very distinctive tapping of a woodpecker (H) in the woodland by the sheep field.

Most of the walk was through this sort of terrane, with the open area in the foreground the result of the fire that swept though part of the estate land some years ago. There I identified buzzard (S&H), chaffinch (S&H) - lots of them - dunnock (H), blue tit (H)....

....robin (S&H), blackbird (S&H), wren (H), wood pigeon (S&H), collared dove (S&H), rook (H), carrion crow (S&H), pink-footed goose (H) and....

....this song thrush (S&H) which serenaded me with an abandon of joy.

Because I didn't count the birds which are close in to the houses because they're being fed by people like me, some of the birds that might have been included in the count included great tit, coal tit, siskin, goldfinch and green finch.

The highlight of the walk occurred along this stretch of track where my Merlin app once again insisted that....


....a chiffchaff was calling. Last time this happened, on Tuesday a week ago - see blog entry here - I dismissed it as an error, but today there was no doubt: the first chiffchaff (H) has arrived. Sadly, although I spent some time searching for him, he was invisible in the dense coniferous plantation.

Which leaves me with a total of sixteen birds either seen and/or heard in an hour's walk.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Introducing Harry

This is not something we normally do, name a wild animal, but this sparrowhawk is exceptional. He's in our garden almost every day, sometime spending time perched on a vantage point where he can wait for a meal to come his way, somethings passing through, at high speed, almost as if he's not really hungry but he wants to remind the small birds that he's around and hasn't forgotten them.

Harry's a good name because it both describes what he does - he harries the small birds - and it sounds princely - and a prince he certainly is.

We're now waiting with some impatience to see if he finds a mate to show off to us, and to the small birds.  If he does, I wonder what we'll call her.

Monday, March 16, 2026

Friends

Judging by the photographs in the album my mother made for me to take to England when I was sent to school there in January 1954, I was not short of friends - this is my third birthday, at the old German bungalow in Dar-es-Salaam.

However, one or two photos show a different picture. The boy at the right, all by himself, is me at the Crole-Rees' party on one of the Dar-es-Salaam beaches. I don't look unhappy. I just look as if I don't want to be doing what the others are doing.

When we moved to Mombasa and went to the European primary school just down the road from our house we had many friends. This is the first of four pictures taken at the Swimming Club. My brother Richard and I are at centre, and the girl and boy at right and left lived in one of the flats in the building next door to our house in Cliff Avenue - I think owned by one of the banks. Sadly, I can only remember the boy's name, David.

I look quite happy in this picture which shows Mrs Shinn, wife of a colleague of my father's, with her daughters Sandra, right, and Rhonelda. We didn't like them mostly because my father, who had always wanted a daughter, kept threatening to swap one of us for one of the Shinn girls.

In this picture, from left to right, are John Solly, me, Mark Solly and my brother Richard, gathered round the yacht made for me by an engineer on one of my father's ships, and called Defender after the last ship my grandfather commanded. The picture was taken in 1953.

This picture shows the four of us again but with a boy, on the right, whom I remember but can't name - and look how unhappy I am! I suspect that this might have been in the summer holidays of 1954 or '55, shortly before I set out for school in England.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

A Saturday Walk

We parked this morning at a point along the Littleferry road where a short walk gave us this view across Loch Fleet. From here we could watch the a scattering of birds working the mudflats - mallard, shelduck, widgeon, oystercatcher, curlew, and half-a-dozen gulls - before crossing the road and plunging....

....into the plantation, parts of which were badly hit by the storms of the early winter.

Walking through this woodland we identified wren, crow, woodpecker and blackbird but the place was eerily silent, so we were quite pleased to emerge on the far side onto....

....a sandy beach reappearing after the 8am high tide, with something dark lying on it - visible at very centre of this picture - which turned out to be....

....a seal, minding its own business while it enjoyed the sun.

We skirted widely round it but it didn't enjoy our presence so....

....made its way down the beach and, reluctantly....

....out to sea, from where it lay watching us until we had passed.

We walked a little further along the beach, seeing just three oystercatcher, three sanderling and a single gull, until we found a spot where we could sit and watch the view and the occasional passing humans - in the event, just one small group of three people with three dogs.

It was a beautiful morning for a walk, if a little chilly, but the lack of wildlife - even allowing that many species may already be involved in pairing up and nest-building - remains a real worry.

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Sea Eagles

Sea eagles were reintroduced in Scotland when Norwegian birds were released, first on Rum in 1975 and then on Mull in 1985. Almost as soon as we arrived on Ardnamurchan in 1997 to run the Kilchoan shop, with Rum just to the north of us and Mull to the south, we began seeing them, and by the time we left they were well-established and had begun nesting on Ardnamurchan itself.

They were soon displacing the resident golden eagle population, which retreated inland as the sea eagles' range expanded. Not that their arrival was welcomed by all. I have seen enough sea eagles passing over....

....with the pathetic remains of a lamb in its talons to have a deep sympathy for the crofters who were losing both income and their much-loved animals.

Sea eagles are magnificent birds to watch, so we soon learned that, if we wanted to see one, then we needed to pay attention to the local gull population which, when an eagle strayed into their territory, would get up and mob it - noisily.

Not that it is easy to identify whether the large raptor one is watching is a sea eagle, golden eagle or buzzard. The best way of telling from a distance is if one can recognise the birds that are mobbing it; things like the crows and gull are dwarfed by the sea eagle's size.

Here on the east coast descendants of the sea eagles which were released on the west coast so many decades ago are now starting to arrive. We've seen them, always at a distance, and other people have reported quite close encounters - but I have yet to take a good picture of one.

The picture above was taken at lunch time today when a sea eagle - look at the size of the crow chasing it to get an idea of its size - passed over. I saw it - or another - again this afternoon, but without the chance of even a distant photograph.

I look forward to my first really good photograph of a Golspie sea eagle.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Where Have They Gone? - 4

Our retreat from Rhodesia to the UK, and the knowledge that we could not return as it was spiralling downwards into a bitter civil war, was a huge setback for us, for we had hoped to make our lives with its beautiful people in a country which had huge potential.

It was good to see the family. While my parents had been out to visit us in Rhodesia, Mrs MW had seen none of her relatives.

To re-set my 'career', we spent three years in England, the first....

in Bristol where we lived in a damp, pokey ground floor flat. It wasn't ideal as our eldest daughter was born during our time there, while I completed my teacher qualifications at the university.

We made friends in Bristol but we were there for too short a time for these friendships to endure, so the most important were those we had formed before our Rhodesian expedition, in particular....

....Brian and Val Jones whom we had first met while we were students at the University of Keele. While we lost touch with Val, for many years we heard irregularly from Brian: the last we heard of him he was happily settled in Spain.

In the next two years I gained teaching experience and a full teacher qualification in the UK system at the grammar school in Ludlow, Shropshire. There we met many good people to some of whom we extended a warm invitation to come and visit us in our next relocation - to the West Indies - but only one couple took us up on the offer.

So, out of the many friends we made during those three years, we remain in touch with only one couple. In some ways, I suppose, we could not expect to stay in touch with many as we chose a very peripatetic lifestyle - but that does not prevent us wondering what happened to all those we knew well.

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Signs of Spring


With NatureScot's Instagram feed today reporting the year's first sightings of adders I set off this morning to walk up the track where, last summer, we had a resident adder, not with great expectations - but instead I found other signs of the changing season, like....

....lambs in the local farmer's fields near the house and, further up the track....


.....the first frogspawn of the year.

These frogs must be pretty optimistic as the weather has been very dry recently, there has been overnight ice on all the standing water, and the forecast for the next few days is for a considerable drop in temperature from the present giddy heights above 10C

My walk also gave me some good pictures of this stonechat. I don't think stonechats are migratory but we haven't seen any over the winter, not until we had a brief sighting of one at Littleferry the other morning.

The Merlin bird ID app produced a surprising result this morning....


....when it reported 'hearing' a chiffchaff. I didn't hear one,  and it seems very early for them, but maybe I was distracted by something else.

On my way home a very noisy running battle was being fought along this forest front between a pair of ravens and a pair of....


....red kites, a confrontation which the kites seemed to win - so perhaps we'll have them nesting near here this summer.