Showing posts with label rspb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rspb. Show all posts

7 Nov 2022

In Praise of the Swift and Hannah Bourne-Taylor

Photo of a swift (Apus apus) by David Chapman
 
 
I. 
 
I like most birds. 
 
But I particularly like the little birds that used to be seen in British skies and which I remember from my childhood: birds like the swift, for example, which I was saddened (but not surprised) to discover is now on the conservation red list; i.e., heading for extinction unless action is taken swiftly to enable it to survive [1].  
 
If a bird can be characterised as a warm-blooded vertebrate possessing feathers which likes to nest and lay eggs, for me it's the ability to fly that really makes a bird a bird [2]
 
And the swift can fly further, faster and higher than almost any other bird; they even eat, sleep, and mate on the wing, hardly ever bothering to land. So this makes it a kind of super-bird in my eyes, although it used to be popularly known as the devil bird (perhaps because of its forked tail).
 
Like other small birds, such as swallows and sparrows, they like to live in tiny gaps in the roofs and walls of old houses and churches. But thanks to our obsession today with renovation and insulation - and the ugly new buildings which are designed to afford no other creature shelter or sanctuary - their traditional nest sites are fast disappearing.     
 
Personally, I don't want to live in a world without nooks and crannies, moonlight, moths and spider-webs. And I certainly don't want to live in a world without swifts, which is why I fully support the actions of Hannah Bourne-Taylor - a posh bird prepared to get her kit off in defence of a once common little bird ...
 

II.
 
Whilst I like birds, Hannah Bourne-Taylor really likes birds - and she's particularly a fan of the swift, as a video uploaded to YouTube earlier this year makes clear: click here
 
This is the kind of woman who would let a baby finch nest in her hair for three months [3], so obviously she'd be prepared to strip naked on a chilly November day and march through London wearing nothing but bodypaint designed by the Italian artist Guido Daniele to resemble the markings on a bird as part of a campaign (supported by the RSPB and Rewriting Extinction) to support declining species in the UK. 
 
And good on her, I say, though - and this is a small quibble - if you're going to stage a naked protest, then do remove your knickers, otherwise it somewhat lessens the impact and seems a bit lame.
 
On Bonfire Day, Ms Bourne-Taylor first made a speech at Speaker's Corner in Hyde Park, then set off to Downing Street where she submitted a petition to Number 10, asking that so-called swift bricks [4] be made compulsory in new housing developments. 

Ms Bourne-Taylor is hoping that her petition will gather 100,000 signatures, so that it will be debated in Parliament. Obviously, I wish her luck with that and encourage readers to add their name to the petition by clicking here.


Photo credit: PA Images


Notes

[1] The breeding population of swifts in the UK has fallen by 50% in the last twenty years. There are now thought to be around 59,000 breeding pairs. 
 
[2] I am aware, obviously, that there are species of flightless birds, including penguins and emus, for example, but these creatures have, through evolution, lost the ability to fly (which is why they still possess wings).  

[3] I'm not exaggerating or making this up; see her piece in The Guardian (25 March, 2022): click here.
 
[4] Swift bricks, are as the name suggests, bricks with a hollow space that provides a suitable nesting environment for swifts, or other small birds, including sparrows, house martins, and starlings.  
 

3 Jan 2021

New Year's Eve 2020: Fireworks, Propaganda, and an Avian Mortality Event


 
Picture credits: BBC News / IOPA Facebook
 
 
I have already expressed my reservations regarding New Year's Eve fireworks in a post entitled Panem et Pyrotechnics - namely, that they make North Koreans of us all. 
 
This opinion was reinforced a few days ago, when that idiotic little weasel posing as the Mayor of London, Mr. Sadiq Khan, decided to light up the night sky above the Millennium Dome with a clenched fist symbol in support of Black Lives Matter. 
 
The locked down masses prohibited from attending the event in person - because of the virus - were, thanks to a complicit state broadcaster, able to enjoy the £1.5 million spectacle (described by some as a virtue signalling political stunt) live on TV and social media.    
 
Other highlights of the show included the turning of London's bridges blue and yellow with lasers on the eve that the Brexit transition period ended and the UK finally left the EU, and 300 drones forming the shape of a giant turtle with a map of Africa on its shell to express concern about the so-called climate crisis
 
As provocative and divisive as this was, it didn't have the heartbreaking horror of events in Rome, where a New Year's Eve firework display resulted in the deaths of hundreds of birds, mostly starlings, that were roosting nearby. 
 
Footage filmed from outside the city's main train station, showed the bodies of the birds littering the streets, as some reports insensitively described the scene, as if they were just feathered pieces of trash waiting to be swept away and their lives didn't matter.
 
A spokesperson for the Italian branch of the International Organisation for the Protection of Animals claimed that the poor things were essentially scared to death by the fireworks and although the RSPB claims that there is little evidence to suggest that fireworks present a grave danger to wild birds, I do not believe them and would challenge their record of protecting birds over the last 50 years when avian numbers have (in some cases dramatically) declined.