Monday 23 September 2013

The Hypocrites In The Temple

I'm going to apologise up front for the abandonment of photographs in this particular piece. It would be inappropriate to include photos, as you will understand as you read this. A piece of writing which many will label a 'rant'. Some might call it 'sour grapes'. Whatever.

As a poor, inadequate but burgeoning photographer I tend to buy photographic magazines. Mainly to educate and inspire, so they are 'how to' type publications .. not the arty paper bound galleries that applaud the undoubted talents of our top 'protogs'. So I get mightily pissed off when I spend good money and find myself reading what I would term 'wildlife propaganda' in these magazines.  A case in hand is typical of what I mean. A leading magazine displayed a series of photos by Staffan Widstrand, director of Wild Wonders of Europe. Personally, I thought most of the photos were poor .. but what do I know? I see better images on Facebook every day. What really rankled, however, was this guys audacity in stating that he wanted to extend his conservation organisation to start a Wild Wonders of China group. The aim is to promote 'mass communication about natural heritage' or, if you're cynical like me .. to give him and his cronies another open-access wilderness to photograph? Give me a break! Better still, he states that he wants to get 1.5 billion Chinese to look at wildlife as not just something you put on a plate. A noble statement but one that is so indicative of the arrogance of so many high profile wildlife photographers. Nature is a rich, diverse wonderland steeped in drama, conflict and self-regulation. We are part of that, and so are our nutrional needs. Wolves and big cats don't have the franchise on hunting for meat.

Why do our top protogs and documenteers keep attempting to influence or fiddle with the outcome?
So .. here's a very personal plea to anyone waving a 600mm lens at a threatened species in the near future. Just take the pics, please, guys? And concentrate on the photos. Nature should decide whether it survives or not.

To photograph wildlife and attempt to take the 'wild' away from the 'life' is total hypocrisy.



copyright Ian Barnett Sept 2013
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Thursday 12 September 2013

A Little Known Norfolk Gem

Many wildlife watchers pay a visit to Strumpshaw Fen while in Norfolk. This large RSPB reserve lies alongside the River Yare between Norwich and Great Yarmouth. I paid a return visit this week and, as always, had the usual dialogue with the volunteer manning the entrance.  "Why don't you join?" she asked innocently. "Because I don't agree with the RSPB's political stance" I replied. She looked puzzled .. a mere foot soldier unaware of the foibles and faults of the RSPB's executives. I was about to say "I won't join until you stop blaming gamekeepers for raptor deaths and recognise the need for predator control to protect birds". My wife dragged me away before I started my lecture and we enjoyed a few hours rambling about, photographing insect and birdlife.
 

 A wonderful reserve for those who enjoy close access to nature .. but this article is about another reserve, nearby. One of the most magical places in Norfolk. And it isn't run by the RSPB.
The Ted Ellis Wheatfen nature reserve is on the opposite side of the River Yare to Strumpshaw, near a village called Surlingham. It is managed by the Ted Ellis Trust. Wheatfen Broad and its surrounding 130 acre reserve is the legacy of Ted Ellis, a wildlife writer and broadcaster who lived in a cottage on the reserve for forty years until his death in 1986. This is a much more intimate reserve than Strumpshaw. A maze of narrow, moist paths weaving amongst deep dykes and through acres of sedge and fen. Each corner you turn brings a new surprise. On a warm summers day like today, the air is brimming with insect life.
 
The paths are rich with wildflowers such as orange balsam, hemp agrimony, yellow iris, ragged robin and meadowsweet. These attract an array of butterflies, dragonflies and damselflies. The latter two alighting on the posts and rails of the many bridges carrying the visitor over the dykes and lokes.

Birdlife is rich if you pick the right time of day. Heron, kingfisher, cormorant, reed bunting, reed warbler, cettis warbler, sedge warbler. King of the sky .. and abundant in this area .. is the marsh harrier. In July, the swallowtail butterfly (one of Britains rarities) is prolific here. As well as the fen, the walks here take you through some typical alder carr, in Surlingham Wood .. a carr being, basically, a wood with its roots largely under water!
 
 
If you pay a visit to Wheatfen, I would recommend good walking boots. The ground is lush, peaty and soft. Take a pair of binoculars and definitely take a camera. Sit for a while on one of the many benches and just listen to the sound of pure tranquility. If you're very lucky (as happened to us on a previous visit) a family of weasels may pass by. As we left today, the warden David Nobbs told us that an osprey paid a passing visit last week for a few days. That, I would love to have seen. No wonder this one of David Bellamys favourite spots! And not an RSPB badge in sight.
 


Copyright Ian Barnett Sept 2013
 


 

Saturday 7 September 2013

Eden Concluded

Getting lost on Loughrigg Fell for the second time in my life has probably earned me the deserved reputation of the worlds worst map reader. Actually, that's probably not fair. I didn't have a map. I had one of those little pocket size cards ( you know.. "20 mother-in-law friendly walks in the Lakes" ) which proved to be a tad inaccurate. I was starting to get suspicious when we passed Lily Tarn for the third time. The first time, the in-laws commented that they felt they'd been here before but I brushed it off, saying that all these tarns look the same. The third time though, I was rumbled. After half an hour of trying to find the path down and failing, I passed the card to my wife. Ten minutes later we were sitting in Rothay Park eating ice creams. Back at the cottage my little red friend obliged again and I was amazed at its disregard for humans and dogs, bouncing around in the hazel tree and hopping across branches unperturbed even by the lads in the Mountain Rescue team who came to practise climbing on Jackdaw Scar. Charlie the Cocker didn't take kindly to Cumbrias finest coming too close to his newly claimed territory but I feared the womenfolk suddenly had a hankering to get seriously lost somewhere? I locked all the walking maps away in case they hatched a plot. That night, when the lads had left and the jakes returned to their roost, I sat calling owls again and drew in three male tawny's with my squeaker, imitating the females distinct "kee-wick".


A request for a rest day allowed a visit to Lowther Castle to see first-hand the restoration work going on there. Derrick escaped with a day to himself on the river and left me wishing I enjoyed angling! We walked the whole 130 acres, saw the red squirrel hides put up by the P&DRSG (see last blog) and glimpsed one red disappearing into the wood. 


Highlight for me (never a fan of old buildings) was turning off the escarpment trail and walking right under a buzzard in the wood, which floated over our heads and sat on a nearby branch watching us. This prompted a visit up the road to the Lakeland Bird Of Prey Centre where we enjoyed (I kid you not) a two and a half hour talk and flying display. It was superb. Informative, amusing and .. as always with raptors .. captivating. We watched a Peregrine Falcon, two Gyr Falcons and a Harris Hawk flown. Excellent.


I got my revenge for Loughrigg at Grizedale Forest by picking the White Trail and telling everyone there were no hills. We stopped at Hawkshead for the obligatory window shopping and I was pleased to see this quaint little village still retains some of its charm .. unlike Windemere, which holds no appeal to me.
Grizedale, not for the first time, disappointed in its lack of wildlife or birdsong. A lush forest but too silent .. much like Norfolks Brecks. It redeemed itself a tad with the autumn fungal displays and Grizedale Tarns mirror surface but the wildest creatures we saw were the chaffinches scavenging around the visitor centre. Returning to the cottage I was pleased to find a note tucked under the in-laws windscreen wipers from Sarah McNeil and Jerry Moss saying that they'd called by while on patrol in the area. Sorry we missed you, guys, but thanks for trying!








The final day was a relative washout so we went into Penrith, where John Norris finally broke the padlock on my wallet and I walked out with a Wychwood Packlite backpack .. designed for the angler but perfect for the wilderness photographer. The wife and I wrapped up the week with a long afternoon walk local to Well Tree Cottage, in the pouring rain, returning with two very soggy but very content dogs. When we left this morning the river was in full flow after yesterdays downpours, which left Derrick distraught. He knew that the best days fishing would be tomorrow, in the deep and clouded pools. 





A wonderful week in a stunning part of the country and a lesson learned in terms of photography. for I deliberately lightened the load by leaving my smaller Nikon 80-400 zoom behind. Big mistake. The red squirrel pics I took with a Sigma 50-500 zoom, handheld. I dumped dozens of unusable pics due to blur (it's a very heavy lens). As you read this, I'm back in Norwich with a second week off, on my own stamping ground. The gun ban has been lifted and I certainly won't need any maps. Unlike Loughrigg, I know this patch like the back my hand! Gotta go .. I have about 500 photos to sort through!

Copyright Ian Barnett Sept 2013
 


Wednesday 4 September 2013

The Garden Of Eden


When the family decided that a change of holiday venue was in order and we'd book a cottage in Cumbria instead of the South West, I must confess to touch of disappointment. My health hasn't been great over the past two years so there was little chance of me climbing from Wast Water to Scafell Pike via Mickeldore as we had ten years earlier. If it nearly killed me then, Lingmell Gill would be certain of a victim if I tried it now! The gentler Tors of Dartmoor and Devons rolling wooded hills are test enough for me now. But here we were, freshly arrived at a remote cottage in a small gulley below Kings Meaburn. We were in the Valley of Eden, close to Penrith. As soon as we disembarked to explore our new home for the week, I knew that I was going to enjoy this. Well Tree Cottage was possibly the best equipped cottage we have ever rented for a holiday. All mod-cons, a walled garden to dissuade renegade cockers and lurchers from escaping across the Cumbrian countryside and within an hour we had discovered Well Tree's most superb asset. It had no wi-fi and no phone signal! We were cut off! Initial panic about losing all my Facebook friends and Google plussers receded when I realised that it also meant no-one from work could contact me .. unless by carrier pigeon. Superb!



Well Tree lies next to a ford over the River Lyvennet so having unpacked, we all set off to explore the fly-fishing beats which came free with the temporary tenancy. Personally, I find fishing as about exciting as  watching the National Lottery draw. There seems a lot of investment for little return. So while the father-in-law pointed out eddies and pools and trout lay-ups, I was looking for otter sign, heronries etc. My role for the week would be chief photographer and scribe, which everyone knew should keep me out of trouble. She Who Must Be Obeyed had already implemented the obligatory 'arms embargo' so was now worrying how an air-gun ban and a Facebook drought might effect my mental health. Back at  the cottage, after our first evenings supper, I sat out on the cottages paved patio, turned off the lights, listened to a tawny owl and studied the most three dimensional sky I have been privileged to witness in many years. With absolutely no light pollution, I could see the edge of the universe from here (helped, undoubtedly by some generous portions of a particularly tasty complimentary Cabernet left by the cottages owners).That night I lay in bed with the windows open and drifted off to sleep in the blackest place on Earth, soothed by the lullaby of the river bubbling over the rocks below the ford. Heaven .. though it could be hell for an incontinent!


Now one thing I was hell bent on achieving while in Cumbria was to photograph wild red squirrels for the first time. By 'wild', I don't mean vicious red squirrels .. I mean reds that haven't been spoon fed peanuts by tourists. I guessed that it may be a challenge. No sooner had we cleared up after the bacon butties next morning when I noticed what looked like a tiny fox clambering among the leaves on the beech overlooking the patio. As I got busy with the Nikon, there was much debate about 'was it red or was it grey'? It was actually me who was playing the cynic here, having shot hundreds and hundreds of greys back in Norfolk. Grey squirrel youngsters are often streaked with rufus fur. This little beauty was as red as Reynard so while I was sure it was a red squirrel, the ears had totally thrown me? I had been expecting those 'elf-like' ears, longer and more pointed than a greys. Perhaps the ears develop with age? I needed to find out but, needless to say, I was thrilled to get some cracking pics on the first morning of a red feeding on ripening cob nuts. 




A little later we were driving to Penrith when Derrick (my Father-in law) and I spotted an interesting looking roadkill at the side of a lane. "Was that what I think it was?" I asked. "Mink, I think!" he answered. "Or was it a black squirrel?" We were still debating it two miles along and decided to double back and take a look. The women-folk sat in the car looking embarrassed as I took pics of the expired mammal on my iPhone while fellow tourists overtook us. I was relieved that it was a mink. I don't think I could have handled the excitement of my first red and my first black in one day! Having survived an expedition around John Norris without opening my wallet, I sat later baiting mice with peanuts on the patio and stealing their souls with my DSLR. Busy little chaps, mice! I'm like a child again when I get a new habitat to explore so spent my idle moments lifting stones and poking around in crevices in the gardens stone walls looking for bugs and beasties.


The cottage sits under a rocky bluff known as Jackdaw Scar, whose naming became apparent when the large colony of jakes nesting on its ledges busied back and forth. The random 'chakking' of the residents added some character to an otherwise noiseless valley. I was mildly amused one morning when I decided to explore the wood on the far bank before anyone else had risen. Next to the gate was the sign below, put up by the Penrith & District Red Squirrel Group. Jerry (and his partner Sarah) are Facebook Friends of mine. So even without wi-fi, there was a link! Over the rest of the week I saw a number of similar signs as well as many road signs asking drivers to take care and watch out for our native 'sciurus vulgaris'.





Despite the resident wildlife, I was struck by the dearth of rabbits around us and also the lack of buzzards. I used to thrill at watching buzzards soar in the valleys up here while in Norfolk they were few and far between. Now the tables seem to have turned. Is it because East Anglia harbours so many rabbits? Perhaps. By far the most conspicuous in its absence was the grey squirrel. I didn't see one during the whole week. A credit, surely, to the work of the Red Squirrel Rangers.
Of course, our trip isn't entirely about me watching wildlife. We're walking too and if this trip is proving to me that the fountain of youth is now reducing to a trickle, it has definitely proved hard for Dylan .. our ten year old lurcher. The old boy is creaking like an old door after jaunts up Cunswick Scar and Loughrigg Fell. The Lakeland paths are rarely dog-friendly and where years ago he leapt the walls or scrambled over the ladder stiles, we now find ourselves lifting him over. Yet, as is the way of hounds, he won't let himself be left behind.



So .. if you are reading this today it is because I've surfaced somewhere among the great unwashed to  release my blog into that vast ocean that is the Internet before sinking again back into the Garden of Eden for a few final days of peace and quiet. The 2lb trout which I have named the Brown Pimpernel hangs in the swim below the footbridge, refusing every fly in the box and driving Derrick insane. My camera shutter clicks relentlessly, recording titmouse and house-mouse and red and nuthatch. Charlie the Cocker lives in the eternal hope that we'll leave the gate open. Dylan just lies in the shade with one eye open, hoping never to see a hill again and dreaming of his Norfolk. Soon, Old Boy. Very soon.






Copyright Ian Barnett September 2013