Established in 2007 by Timothy William Ferres: writing about a variety of topics including the Monarchy, Nobility, Gentry, Heraldry, Pageantry, Heritage, Country Houses, Conservation, Cats, Tchaikovsky.
Tuesday, 21 July 2009
Two Bird Books
Here are two of my favourite bird books. They aren't particularly academic; but they are quite fascinating.
Somebody gave me The Bird Table Book, by Tony Soper. I think it's a good, rudimentary little book providing the reader with plenty of information about most of our garden birds.
I acquired my second, older book in a second-hand book-store - I think in North Street, Belfast. It is entitled Our Garden Birds, and it's written by H Mortimer Batten. It was first published in 1930 and my hard-back cost five shillings in old money.
This book contains lovely, full-page colour plate sketches of most garden birds and many more. My book has occasional hand-written notes along-side some pages; it had been owned by a man of the Cloth, the Reverend J Cullen. He has written a note on the back page as follows: "calling (of) the bat and tree creeper are inaudible to many people who have not got a very sensitive ear. They both have a very high frequency".
In his chapter about the blackbird, the author writes: Personally I think the blackbird stands higher than the mavis as a songster. His sweetest notes are singularly sweet, and he flings his song forth across the morning in a carelessly chosen chaos of spontaneous notes...
The book's then owner, Mr Cullen, scribbled at the side: "Exactly the opinion of the late Rev. W Butterly" (or Battersby; it's a bit illegible). The mavis is, incidentally, a colloquial term for the song thrush.
Whatever I paid for this book, and it wasn't much, it was worth it. It may have been £4.
A neighbour of mine claims to encounter many unusual species in our environs - everything from an Eagle Owl who steals his cats to the Pink-footed goose that eats his bananas. His recent rants refer to sightings of a Great Spotted Woodpecker - a bird that has apparently not frequented these parts for quite some time. None of the other neighbours has seen anything so we think it must be a Lesser Spotted Woodpecker!
ReplyDeleteHappy Twitching Lord Belmont and don't let the Buzzards get you down like the unfortunate chap in this following news link. (although he is a lawyer and he'll probably sue )
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/cornwall/8156734.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/cornwall/8156734.stm
ReplyDelete3rd time lucky?
ReplyDeletehttp://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/cornwall/
8156734.stm
A fine anecdote. Tonymac. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteTim