Poem – We fell asleep in one world and woke in another!

Such a great poem to music and images.

Is nature giving us a reminder?

Nature doesn’t need us – we are guests! I hope we remember that!

https://youtube.com/c/AuthorHaroonRashid

The poem was written by Haroon Rashid. It was sent to me by my mate Graham in Oz. Not so keen on the music but the poem is great!

Thanks Haroon.

A heron having trouble with its dinner – photos

While touring Aberdeen Dock in Hong Kong we came upon this heron.  It had caught a big fish but I think it was struggling. The fish was big and the heron seemed to be having trouble working out how to swallow it. We watched it for a while until it finally succeeded. 

 

Amazing photography of nature.

Amazing Photography of Nature. It really demonstrates how we need to cherish and protect this magnificent array of wonder. Some tragic most just beautiful.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2020/jul/10/the-week-in-wildlife-in-pictures?CMP=share_btn_fb&fbclid=IwAR30nM_L66qoLk3x3FfZTMRsqspC6XhVo5bj_Jpzfx1B-IgkBMtiu_OKGzI

Nature destroyed!

Just the day before yesterday I was ecstatic. I was on my daily walk up my hill into nature. I had seen the stoat, close up, carrying a rabbit it had killed, dragging it along the lane. I had watched a kestrel hovering, looking for a vole. I had delighted in the beautiful blue cornflowers that had appeared on the verges and felt good at the succession of wonderful wildflowers that had appeared on the wide verges.

Nature, during lockdown, was sustaining me.

Either side of that lane were wide verges – up to five metres wide and going the length of the lane. They were a nature reserve for herb and fur, for insect and bird. Those verges gave life and refuge to nature.

Heaven knows there is little of nature left. The insects have been decimated. The space for wildlife greatly reduced. Ponds have been filled, hedges grubbed up so that big farm machinery can operate more efficiently, streams are culverted, trees cut down and what is left is very little, and diminishing by the day.

When I was a boy there were meadows of long grass and wildflowers, alive with bees, butterflies, beetles and grasshoppers. The skies were full of swallows and swifts. There were frogs, newts and toads in the ponds, sticklebacks in the streams and caterpillars in hedges and trees. Even that was merely the rump of what had once been when Britain was one great forest, but it seemed rich and enriching.

Over the years I have seen that richness eroded. No longer the bees and butterflies, flocks of swifts are down to a few, no more hedgehogs flattened in the roads. Nature is greatly reduced.

My daily walks up the hill during lockdown has been delightful. I have seen so much living in that strip of nature.  It was a haven. Every day I would go up there not knowing what I might spot. It was a thrill in these barren times.

Looking out over the green fields one might be fooled into to thinking that nature is all around us. It isn’t. Those green fields are a barren desert, lethal to life. They are sprayed with pesticide and herbicide so that any ‘weed’ or ‘pest’ that dares to intrude is destroyed.

The verges and remaining hedgerows are the last refuges for nature and even they are threatened by the drift of those deadly sprays.

It was a shock. It felt like a punch. The whole of the five-metre verges, all the brambles and undergrowth, all the wildflowers and grasses, the habitat for millions of insects, the seeds to feed the birds, the homes and food for the voles and mice, had been destroyed, mown flat. It was vandalism on a huge scale.

What were the stoats going to feed on now? Where were the voles for the kestrel and barn owl? Where were the insects for the swift and swallow? All gone! Destroyed.

The whole nature reserve along the Wold Road was a barren desert, like the fields around it.

Seemingly there is neither use nor room for nature anymore. It is untidy, an inconvenience, even an irritation.

Unless we start to value it, make space for it and protect it, we will not have anything left for our grandchildren to thrill at. Surely it deserves to be given space to live? Surely enough of us care? We value the bird song and the sight of our wonderful wildlife, don’t we?

Was it just ignorance? Or was it malice? Did someone just want to make it look tidier? Or did someone want to be rid of all those creatures and plants?

What is the basis of this ignorant policy?

It makes me feel sad, angry and ashamed.

The Corona Diaries – Day 108

I’m a little bemused. We have opened up shops, cinemas and just about everything now (the result of which will show up in two or three weeks time) and Johnson is urging us to eat in restaurants (giving us 50 per cent off), but we know that the virus is spread via droplets in confined spaces (like restaurants, shops and cinemas). Is he deliberately trying to entice us into enclosed spaces where we are much more likely to catch the disease? We have an increase to 642 new cases today and 85 more deaths. Surely it makes sense to eradicate the disease before opening up? Wouldn’t it make more sense to open up in outside areas and not inside?

I’m going for a meal with friends tomorrow. We’re going to our local restaurant – but we are social distancing and will be eating outside.

If the government wanted they could pedestrianise and give space for cafes and restaurants to provide outside seating. Why didn’t they do that?

Johnson has now done a complete U-turn and is urging facemasks now. About time too!

In the USA they’ve topped 136,000 deaths – another 874 deaths today – and have 57,500 new cases in an upward trajectory – including a spike due to Trump’s rally.

In Brazil, as Bolsonaro takes a useless drug to ward off his illness,  they have had 69,406 deaths – 1220 more today – with another 42,619 new cases.

Don’t you just love populist leaders??

It’s not been a good day today. I think tempers are a bit short. We went for a walk to discover that the beautiful area, where we have seen so much wildlife, has been flattened. The ten metre-wide verges, full of wildflowers, where the stoats, hedgehogs and butterflies live, where the barn owl hunts and the kestrel, buzzard and fox, has been mown along the whole length of the road. All those habitats destroyed. The flowers were coming up to seed. There were caterpillars on the nettles.  Where are the creatures going to move to? There is so little natural habitat left. It is all highly industrialised fields, sprayed with insecticide – lethal death-traps for any insect that dares to go near – a barren green desert. This is a disaster for wildlife.

On the way back I pulled a calf muscle, so it looks as if my walks will be out for a few days.

The West Indies seem to be taking us apart at cricket.

So I sat at my computer, wrote a strong letter to the council and one to the local press, played my Family albums and felt very pissed off.

Stay safe!! Tomorrow might be a better day!

The magpie – an incredible little video of a pet magpie.

I think if people could see how intelligent and emotional animals were capable of being they would treat them with more compassion.

This reminded me of my pet crow Joey.

 

The Most dangerous Species on Earth.

Nothing else needs saying.

Wild Life Photos of the Year – Spectacular!!

https://www.boredpanda.com/gdt-nature-photographer-of-the-year-2020/?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Branded+Content&utm_campaign=ScienceDump&fbclid=IwAR3WW23IldRUmwPQHMCukSCqQ7SfawOjyZSDvCq0WQcI9Du8pVR7H48Ab9k

Poetry – Back Home for Tea – a poem for the destroyers of nature!

Poetry – Back Home for Tea – a poem for the destroyers of nature!

elephant GP

Back Home for tea

The world is now so small we can whizz round in our Leah Jets in no time at all. The logging companies have opened up the jungle to chop down the tallest trees and the hunters pour in through the new roads.

They machine gun rhino and elephant from trucks and light planes.

They take the tusks to carve and the horn to grind down as a cure for impotence (just what we need).

They chop the forest, murder our cousins – chimps, gorillas and orangutans, for bush-meat and still harpoon whales.

The great American hunters buy trophies. With a bunch of natives in tow they track lion, elephant and rhino and shoot with high-calibre rifle from a safe distance. They pay big money to kill off the last of the great beasts.

The palaeontologists say that the first sign of humans appearing on the scene is the total disappearance of all megafauna. We are the most cruel, brutal killers. We have the whole planet in our sights.

 

Back home for tea

 

Machinegun an elephant and rhino, or two,

On the African plain.

Then into the jungle

To pot a gorilla, chimp and whatever might remain.

Flit to Vietnam

To saw down a mighty tree,

Harpoon a Blue Whale

In the Sargasso Sea –

And back home for tea.

 

Opher 13.9.2016

Poetry – A Green Lung full of Fire

A Green Lung full of Fire

 

A great green lung full of fire.

Nature consumed by greed,

Killed by inequality.

Despite the fact that there’s more than enough

They always want more.

It’s an addiction.

 

While eight billion mouths need feeding

There are those

Who seek to exploit

Without a thought

For their effect on the planet.

It’s complete madness.

 

As climate changes and species die

The deniers

Ignore experts and scientists

In the face of overwhelming evidence.

It’s a tragedy.

 

Opher – 1.3.2020