Wednesday, 18 April 2012


Weasel Words

Or Just a Love Thing



Hi, I’m back. Sorry it’s been a while since my last post, but I’ve been a bit preoccupied with some of my voluntary work at the local nature reserve, including helping get a new blog site up and running. If you’re not totally bored by my ramblings here, you can find more about events and the work we do there at http://fohescnews.blogspot.com.

Anyway, back to the plot. Now, I like to think of myself as a liberal minded, tolerant, live and let live sort of bloke, although, after making the occasional comment regarding Saturday night TV, such as “Oh, I see we have another eight hours of talentless, so called celebrities, dancing on ice, in a jungle, while wearing a bucket on their head”, I confess, I do get reminded that “ lots of people like these programmes”, “It takes all sorts to make a world” and/or “It would be a dull world if we were all the same”.

Suitable chastened, I slope off to watch (fall asleep during), quirky foreign language crime series, old recordings of wildlife programmes or repeats of QI on Dave. Honestly, I really do try and take on board, the right of every citizen to pursue, without criticism, whatever lawful pastime they wish, no matter how brain numbingly banal it may appear to me.

As a re-invigorated wildlife watcher, who no doubt bores the pants of anyone foolish enough, not to share my interests, with a different lifestyle perspective, by recounting stories of weasels, rocketing up trees faster than the “Dear Leaders” commemorative centenary whizzbang, I have never thought it my place, to suggest that the out and out twitchers and list obsessive birders, may be missing something.





Fishing for compliments, No, in this case I think it was a perch.







For me, the fun is being out in an environment where trees and plants are springing into life, butterflies are emerging and anything from an osprey to an otter might just turn up. But, by the same token, if all I see is a blue tit making it’s nest or a bank vole sneaking in and out of it’s home, to grab a seed or two, well that does it for me too.

So forgive me, but this week my tolerance has slipped a little.

At one end of the scale, while happily snapping orange tip and comma butterflies on a glorious warm spring afternoon, I encountered a highly knowledgeable, (but apparently soulless) top twitcher, who was writing off his fleeting visit to our reserve as a waste of time, because the pair of ducks he had come to “tick off” were not present. In actual fact they were present – but not where he expected to see them, or indeed was likely to, in a five minute dash.




Orange Tip Butterfly









At the other end of the scale I found myself in a hide with a foul mouthed half wit, who needed to call a friend (on speaker) and boast about spotting “only a f---king watchamacallit, ere, you tell im what it is, I’ve f---king dun im, e aint seen one of them, whatdiducallits”. Followed by, “wotsat, u said that was over there, isat f---king rare, ere, let me foto that, wotsit f---king called”.

Dear God, has the human race now degenerated to a state, where some individuals find the need to be competitive and score points off each other at birdwatching, even when they can’t tell the difference between a dunnock and a dung beetle. Please do not take my comments as snobbish or prudish. As a bird, insect and plant identifier, I am pretty average at best and want to make it crystal clear, that I have found the vast majority of birders and other nature watchers, immensely helpful, patient and tolerant of my questions and ignorance and would hope that, one day, in turn, I could be the same as them.

If these odd individuals sadden me, because (in my opinion) they are missing out on a lot of the real fun, their lives must be utopian compared to the youths that once again kicked in our hide doors. Just so they can scrabble around on the floor for a fleeting moments sexual gratification, in between filling their faces with sweets, cans of pop and often something stronger. The evidence, all of which they leave, strewn around the hides and surrounding area.



Legitimate sexual activity at the reserve - better looking participants as well.









It takes all sorts to make a world?

All photographs taken by and © Tony Bedford