4th
January We’re on the road to Nowhere Talking Heads
Mind you I was not that upset over the camera
being smashed as I had had quite a few problems with it with the lens extension
frequently jamming up. The worst occasion for this to happen was a couple of
years previous whilst watching displaying Little Bustards one February in
Spain. I had taken about six photographs when it jammed. No more could be taken
on that holiday. Once again, I could not be too disappointed as the bustards
raspberry brrrrrrrp, Harry Secombe-like calls were so hilarious!
My new camera had not arrived, so back home for breakfast and last-minute packing. With everything that I could get into the panniers packed, well everything that I thought that I would need, the bike now was too heavy to lift! I had hoped to carry my telescope and tripod, a laptop and various booklets and stickers given to me by the Asthma UK charity and the Geography Association, from whom I had also been given fifty Barnaby Bear books. Rolls of Geography Association stickers and books were OK to take but the weight of the other items meant they all stayed at home.
Would the lack of a telescope make a
significant difference? Time would tell. The lack of a laptop and hence lack of
internet access would become a persistent time-eating problem throughout the
year.
Out in the back garden, I had to brush thick
hoar frost from off my bike but once having done so and having oiled the parts
that nature can reach, Mum and Dad waved me off and despite the weight, the
bike ran smoothly and easily. So, there we were on the road, not to nowhere, on
a road to paradise but on the road to Otmoor RSPB reserve. I say ‘we’ because I
was not alone. I had a collection of cuddly toys with me precariously chained
to the bike. At this point there was a large green frog, Sid, to represent the
RSPB’s rainforest at Harapan in Sumatra and the Wildfowl and Wetland Trust as I
had bought it at their HQ, Slimbridge. There was also a large cuddly
Black-browed Albatross, Albert, for their ongoing albatross campaign and a
glove puppet teddy bear named Barnaby Bear. Barnaby Bear is more famous than I,
not that I am jealous . . . much! He is the symbol of the Geography Association
and teachers; children and parents delight in taking Barnaby Bear all over the
World. There are websites of his adventures both on the BBC’s and the Geography
Association. There are many Barnaby Bear books too, large and small and at
Primary schools, one of the geography curriculum topics is called ‘Where in the
World is Barnaby Bear?’ Well Barnaby Bear was with me, freezing on top of my
sleeping bag on the back of my bike. Poor Barnaby! At least he had fur. Imagine
how a rainforest frog felt in this harsh winter freeze and 2010 was to have
extreme wintry weather, with lots of snow and ice at both ends of it.
After a few miles, my legs were fine, the
initial stiffness having gone, and the cycling was exhilarating. The
countryside, white with frost, had few birds and the roads were relatively free
of traffic.
Heading south I crossed an almost empty M40,
took a wrong turn just after that and stopped to check my maps whilst taking a
breather and admired the view. Back on the correct road, I came to the first
long, hard hill and had to push the bike up the last few metres. A Sparrowhawk [59] glided over a small
attractive church atop the hill I had just climbed as I reached the top and I remounted
my bike pleased to add another bird to the list.
Despite the cold, the effort of the cycling
soon had me removing both woolly hat from beneath my cycling helmet and my
gloves. The sun was low in the sky ahead of me as I headed south and I was
beginning to realise that sweat would become a problem and, sorry to mention it
but asthmatic mucus would need to be constantly blown and spat out. Lovely!
I was stopped along the back route to Banbury
by a phone call from the WWT (Wildfowl & Wetland Trust) nature reserve at
Barnes, London. They asked me to confirm what day and time I would be calling
in so that local press could be arranged.
Beside the road, in a field with a low
depression sat around one hundred Lapwings together with a sizeable number of
the commonest bird seen during the day, Wood Pigeons. These were all fluffed up
and sitting on the ground pretending to be partridges, which had me stopping on
a couple of occasions to check out whether another year tick was in the offing.
A smashing male Ring-necked Pheasant was the next year tick [60]. Otherwise only the occasional small
flock of Fieldfare and Redwing was seen, together with sporadic titmice and
Robins.
More phone calls stopped me as I cycled,
mainly from a persistent teacher from a school in Slough. Tracy Ball from Penn
Wood Junior School was eager that I visit and I was keen to oblige. The school
visits were to be an integral part of the year, a chance to promote ‘Green’
issues with the people who will live with the consequences of our present eco
efforts, or lack of them, children.
When three miles from Banbury yet another
phone call, from Andrew Waters at RSPB Midlands HQ in, luckily, Banbury stopped
me. “Come in and have a coffee,” Andrew said. How could I refuse? Once in the
centre of the town I found the offices, after a chat with a proud local who
wanted to and did tell me not only about how to find the RSPB but also told of
the ‘fine lady with bells on her toes’ in the centre of the town.
What a welcome! I was greeted by hoots from
attractive young ladies who leaned out of the office windows.
After
coffee, and after being given two large RSPB stickers to place on the back of
my florescent jacket and after being given a RSPB yellow collection can for the
front of the bike, photographs were taken with everyone outside for the use of
the local press and RSPB newsletters.
Then it was time to be back on the road again
heading for Otmoor, the large RSPB reserve near Oxford.
On leaving Banbury I recalled my first birding experience of the town, well of the town's sewage works anyway. A day twitching with my then fiancĂ©e Jane back in 1982; a journey to a romantic location to bond our newish relationship. Sunny weather as we drove our old, clanging Marina away from our one-bedroomed bed-sit in a rundown area of Wolverhampton. The car had needed a push start as the starting motor was defunct and now the bearings on the right side gave their repetitive clunking sound as the A roads to Stratford Upon Avon and Banbury were travelled down. Our connection to the grapevine, the way birders found out about what rare birds were available by phoning each other up, was through one ‘Black Country’ John Holian. John was a TV celebrity back in 1983 when a program about birders was made on the Isles of Scilly. Bernard Cribbens had been the outsider to the twitching world and Black Country John, nicknamed because of his roots and TV requirements and not by anything that those who knew him would call him, was his guide for a few days of intense rarity chasing.
Well, John had given us the directions for
Banbury sewage works and we drove through the gate to be greeted by a brave
worker who told us the correct way down to the grass plots. A long walk along a
muddy path towards a small group of birders and then there was the bird, a
lifer for us both and an American far from home. A Lesser Yellowlegs in the
Midlands, a good bird anywhere but extra special here, strutted around this
grassy, wet meadow, accompanied by a number of Meadow Pipits and a lone Water
Pipit. The American wader's legs were indeed bright yellow and within the hour
the bird had been well grilled and UTB. [Under the belt, a twitcher’s term
meaning that the bird had been seen well enough so one could tick it off on
one’s list.]
Not satisfied with one lifer for the day,
Jane and I headed off for Brill in Oxfordshire and having once past through the
delightful village, we soon found a lengthy line of cars with everyone focussed
upon a haystack of a bird devouring some poor, unfortunate creature, actually a
rabbit, about fifty yards away. Jane had not been too thrilled by the American
wader but now she monopolised our telescope as she watched the ‘barn door’
tearing apart and eating the small rabbit. White-tailed Sea Eagle on the list,
another lifer and so close that we could see every feature; its huge, hooked
bill, its immense yellowish talons and large, cruel eyes. It was an immature
bird so no bright white tail but that did not detract from the awe of seeing
this wonderful bird of prey. One could hear the gasp from the birdwatching
crowd as it took to the air, having finished its meal; the official term of
‘barn door’ being such an apt name for it. It was huge and it flapped over our
heads and went away to the west. We followed its flight until it disappeared
behind trees some way off. By now we were leaning against a five-bar gate from
which we scanned the large meadow in front of us and found a Little Owl sitting
on a fence post a little way off, enjoying the winter sunshine. A fox walked
through the scope view completing the scene. A double tick day and all in my
home area of the UK, the Midlands.
Back
to 2010, eventually over the A34 and down towards Stanton St John, it was by
now getting quite dark and I was exhausted. I was cold and the sweat from my
excursions made me feel extremely uncomfortable. My decision to cycle the whole
way from Warwick to Otmoor in one day was in retrospect a dicey one. I was not
yet as fit and strong as I would later become and the last few miles were
extremely tough. A few chunks of Cadbury’s Fruit and Nut, for yes, I am, like
everyone else so the old advert sung by Frank Muir used to say, a bit of a
Cadbury’s Fruit and Nutcase, gave me the energy to climb the last hill. Then,
having found the correct turn off lane, I found the beautiful thatched, stone
cottage of Richard and Lynn Ebbs, two professors at Oxford University now
working at the John Radcliffe hospital: she a Professor of Virology, he a
Professor of Bacteriology.
Once again, my mobile phone rang, this time
almost immediately after I had arrived at the cottage. It was from Central
News, the ITV news program for the Midlands. Could I come into the studios in
Birmingham tomorrow for an interview? I declined the kind offer to cycle fifty
miles back to Brum which would mean having to start the journey all over again.
Anyway, I had already been booked by the Oxford BBC news program for the next
day. TV celebrity! They will have me on ‘I’m a celebrity, get me out of here’ next
and I will not abuse the insects!
Conversation, once I had taken a much needed hot
shower and with a change of clothes, turned to careers and recent holidays.
They spoke of Ecuador and the Galapagos Islands and the need to step over, the
intransigent Blue-footed Boobies there and of meeting on another occasion, the Mountain
Gorillas of Uganda.
Then we were off to the local village hall up
the road in the village where I was to give a talk about my adventure to the
dozen or so who had braved the weather. My talk started with an image of a
beautiful blonde woman sitting with a Mona Lisa like smile holding the tiller
of a small boat. A strange way to start a birdy talk to a small group of local
birders you may think but here was a photograph of the incredible Roz Savage,
who if you do not recognise the name I will elucidate. Roz was an office girl in
London, far away from her native Australia. In 2006 she suddenly decided that
she wanted to do something more with her life.
Therefore, Roz decided to row the Atlantic single-handed. Once the Atlantic was crossed, not content with that tremendous achievement, Roz thought that it would be churlish not to row home to Australia. So, via Hawaii, another challenge was completed, despite being told that her route included areas with impossible to pass waters. Spreading the word of Climate Change, oceanic plastic pollution and save the planet, Roz reached Oz in 2010. She then became the first woman to row across three oceans, completing her row across the Indian Ocean in October 2011. It is amazing what a commitment to advocating a Green life can have you achieve.
47.55
miles 1841 feet elevation up 1651 feet down
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