Wednesday, 9 February 2022

 I am glad to be back, I should have kept up with this blog and just have not either got round to it or had time. Its four years, where does the time go?

Life has changed so much in the last few years, not just because of Covid, although that has had a huge effect. As for Brexit, what a travesty, and I wonder how many people now regret either not voting or voting to go without understanding the results!

 So apart from Brexit and Covid, what else has happened, we have had two Cafe managers, both of whom now have other jobs, one because of Covid and one because he did not drive and so getting to work was pretty tricky. We have had a number of different bird staff, these days people tend not to stay long in jobs. I was talking to a friend of mine who runs a company of over a hundred employees and he said the same thing. People do about two years and then move on. It is a hugely different philosophy than it was when I was younger. We have had three gardeners, Rob left to go self employed, the second one decided he did not like working outside or alone (!) and sadly the third one was lost because of Covid, as indeed were Jan and Mary from the shop. Covid has an awful lot to answer for.

We had a new water main put in and the lawn it had to go across has now recovered thank goodness. Apparently we also resurfaced the carpark, which I can vaguely remember.

A pair of buzzards have been nesting in an oak tree in our flying field for the last three years and they are a bit of a pain because they beat up any bird apart from falcons that go anywhere near the tree. They beat up our birds and the crows beat them up!

We have run two Incubation Courses again with Susie Kasielke from Los Angles, the last one we finished and Susie got home Just before Covid hit and the world closed down. Neil Forbes ran a couple first aid and husbandry courses for us in 2018 as well, which was incredibly kind of him.

We ran a Vulture Harnessing Workshop in August 2019 in the Education room, it went very well, and we had people from South and North America, Africa, Portugal, Spain, India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Scotland and England. Much was learnt and discussed, and the workshop although not a money making venture, continued the work of putting ICBP on the world map for conservation. During the workshop, Benbecula the Steller’s Sea-eagle went AWOL, his telemetry came off and we were reliant on Facebook to get sightings, although you would think that an eagle that size (huge) would be easily spotted. However after chasing many fruitless reports, we finally got a good report and he was seen sitting on the winners post at Chepstow Racecourse! He was very pleased to see Holly when they got there.

We had our five yearly Zoo inspection in November 2018 and then the three yearly one in 2021. We passed both without too much to get done. They get harder and as I write we are now awaiting the new Secretary of States Standards in Zoos, which will go out to consultation once DEFRA get them out. I doubt if anything we say in the consultation will be taken any notice of because it never has been. It

looks like tethering birds in zoos is likely to be banned. If it is across the board and we are not allowed to tether parent reared birds for training purposes it will be a disgrace because trying to train parent reared birds free lofted is far far more stressful for the bird. I don't know who the 'experts' were who have decided this, but there is no doubt at all that they are not expert in training birds of prey.

We closed for Covid along with everyone else, but managed to get most of the Owl Evenings done. However at the end of last year (2021) we did have to cancel the last one because our cafe manager came down with Covid. We have changed the format to a much better one, but then had to change it again because of Avian Influenza which has been the worst outbreak the country has known.

Because of the AI for the last two winters we have had to stop taking in injured wild birds of prey, which is really hard to do, I hate turning them away, but the risk to the collection is too high.

I have not travelled anywhere since 2020. I did go to the Raptor Research Foundation Conference in South Africa in November 2018, which was good and I travelled to India and Nepal as usual, and again in 2019, but have gone nowhere abroad since for obvious reasons. I suspect that those conservation trips will probably start again this year (2022).

Over the last four years we have lost a few birds, we had all our Pigmy Falcons die, we still have not discovered the reason, but I suspect a virus coming in with the food. Last year my beautiful Red Kite Muckle Roe dropped dead in the air while I was flying her. A good way for her to go but a hell of a shock for me. This year we lost Karis my beloved and amazing Saker Falcon whom many people has seen in his spectacular stoops, and Lambrusco our second oldest Yellow Billed Kite. We also lost our lovely Barn Owl which was a big loss for us all. We do now have a lovely pair of Secretary Birds who I hope will breed.

We did a number lectures at Malvern Theatre in '18 and '19 thanks to Nic Lloyd, they were pretty good and it was incredibly kind of his to host them.

But we did have to cancel the last six day falconry course because of Covid, we have not done one since either. 

We made some big changes to the Centre during Covid, we moved the Cafe to the shop so it was more accessible to people passing by. We had no shop for a while but moved some of to the Pavillion in the flying field last summer. We have reduced the collection, sending five vultures to Bulgaria one Saker falcon and four Lesser Kestrels for their conservation breeding programmes. Five of our African White-backed vultures have gone to a lovely huge aviary at Longleat. We have enlarged a number of the aviaries which look great and give the birds more room and have emptied Barn 2 which needs to be taken down.

We moved on almost all the birds from the Lendrum case (illegal birds brought in as eggs from South Africa). And we have had to cut back on the breeding because it is much more difficult to find good homes for the young and so it is wrong to try and breed them.

I think that gets you all pretty much up to date. We did lose a beautiful and very old Turkey Oak in
storm Arwen. It had been condemned by the tree survey man, but I still hated to see it down. Luckily it did not do too much damage and our insurers the NFU have been brilliant about it.

All the dogs are well except that Sorrel has dog dementia which means she barks alot and gets confused easily. But otherwise apart from Flax deciding she wanted to live to Holly instead of me, they are well.


 

 





0 comments:

Hello

I have to say that keeping a weblog can at times become compulsive and at other times a chore. Sometimes I am berrated for not keeping it up and sometimes I get wonderful comments from people who follow the news of the Centre.

It is fun to share the daily goings on here, some good and some bad, some funny and some sad, but all a part of our daily lives.
And as I said before its a pretty cool to be here and it is a great place to visit, you should try coming and watching the birds and meeting the staff and of course the dogs.

An interesting video on Lead

An interesting video on Lead

I find it staggering that people who want to hunt don't see the value in changing their ammunition from lead to a safer product. We have stopped using lead in petrol, in paint, in our water pipes, but they still want to use lead - ah well, apparently eating it not only kills birds but leads to reduced intelligence in humans......................

NO ONE is asking you to stop legal and genuine hunting, they are just asking you to change your ammunition!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHZGQ8i8AwI

HC

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