A brief mention of the initiation of the Brent Goose
Satellite Tracking Project. I'll talk about it in more detail later, but
sufficient to say I was at the launch at Castle Espie and it's very
exciting stuff!
The Irish Brent Goose spends half the year in Arctic
Canada, for the other half the entire world population of these birds
comes to Ireland.
They may be observed at most coastal spots but are most numerous at
Strangford Lough, hence the very large interest by Castle Espie.
Now they are being tracked in their movements, and this
may be witnessed by logging on to
www.wwt.org.uk/brent More later, but
now we must fly off to south-east England.
So we arrived at Standstead, and were told the flight was
delayed for one hour. Shortly afterwards the flight was delayed for two
hours, and shortly after that the flight was delayed for four hours.
Hanging around airports can be energy-sapping, so I am
not quite sure at what stage we were told to leave the departure lounge
and collect our baggage.
We tried to observe the local wildlife, caught -sight of
blackbirds, swallows and a solitary kestrel. But when you are waiting
for an airplane and have no notion of when it is coming, even
bird-spotting can become boring.
Then you meet up with a man who used to work in Belfast
Airport, and he tells you that the sort of announcements we had been
listening to was usually a forerunner to cancellation.
The flight was cancelled, the next one was in three days
time, so we headed into London for a three day spell. Anyone ever had a
flight delayed for three days? Is this a world record?
As a teenager I lived in London, and one of the things
that amazed me was the abundance of grey squirrels and their tameness.
Although everything else in London seemed to have changed, there still
seem to be as many squirrels about, and they still appear to be as tame.
Squirrels are rodents, like rats, but much higher up the
popularity stakes.
There are 273 species of squirrel world-wide, quite an
impressive range. There are flying squirrels, some squirrels hibernate,
there are ground squirrels, and some squirrels live in burrows.
In London, as over here, there are two types of
squirrel, the red and the grey.
The red squirrel is the original squirrel in both
Britain and Ireland, a delightful if retiring animal, not seen as often
as the grey.
Then, about 100 years ago, grey squirrels were
introduced from north America, and have thrived ever since.
I cannot find the exact date for England. but in Ireland
the first grey squirrel was introduced in 1811 in County Longford.
