Category Archives: Society Meetings and Zoom Recordings

News and updates about our upcoming indoor and outdoor meetings, including Links to Zoom recordings of indoor meetings.

METAMORPHOSIS – HOW FLIES ARE SAVING THE WORLD –  Erica McAlister – Tuesday 21st January – Zoom Recording

Flies are beginning to get the recognition they deserve! We were delighted to welcome back their Champion, Dr Erica McAlister of Natural History Museum, London. She enthused about the wonder of flies and explored how the study of these species has led to great discoveries in everything from space travel to forensics, transforming our understanding of agriculture, medicine, AI, biodiversity and ourselves.

To view a recording of  Erica’s talk, click on the link below and enter the passcode when prompted to do so. The recording will be available to view for 30 days.

Unfortunately wifi problems on the night mean that the last 2.5 minutes are intermittent. This was at the point when Erica started to talk about Flies in Space and the results of studies which show that flies returning from space are not in great shape and don’t do so well. As they are genetically quite similar to humans this is not good news for manned space flight. She concluded by saying we need to look after this planet instead!

https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/pX0MTRJc0AeYZfLc0N8N4DzmQcG46-X4rpinzNQOm6gCRLRdtU8b6GYpiNjmQny6.nxIBT3qOkczCP1LP

Passcode: H8y.*K=T

THE WORK OF RSPB INVESTIGATIONS TEAM – Mark Thomas – Tuesday 7th January – Zoom Recording

Mark Thomas heads the RSPB Investigations Team based at Sandy, Beds. He gave a detailed and thought-provoking talk about the important work his team does in protecting our birds, not least in investigating raptor persecution across the UK.

To view the recording click on the link below. The recording is available for 30 days from the date of the meeting.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/16qy33w2HkTWgEwt_m9YzuX_2lAygJr2W/view?usp=drive_link

No password is required

WHAT’S IN A NAME?  – Justin Long – Tuesday 3rd December – Zoom Recording

Society member Justin Long took a sideways look at the naming of living organisms. How are species given their scientific names and what are the dos and don’ts of the naming game? A fascinating, informative and humorous presentation that will repay a second viewing!

To view a recording of  Justin’s talk, click on the link below and enter the passcode when prompted to do so. The recording will be available to view for 30 days.

https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/bpzrzRODy78GAj5m-a9LSCcBaeoaN6SpGXsXWNsKg3UgyfCVNS-wpRbWegsRILMD.c7jfMxex68u6_7Sn

Passcode: Bz1.s?q0

WILDLIFE OF ALBANIA – Tim Arnold – Tue 8 Oct – Recording

This is not the talk in the published programme.  The speaker for the planned talk on deer had to withdraw at extremely short notice as a result of computer problems.  Tim Arnold stepped in to give an improvised presentation on some of the wildlife he had seen while on a historical and archaeological tour of Albania in late May and early June this year.

At the time of the talk, he had not completed work on identifying some of the species.  This video has been produced by editing the recording of the talk to add captions with additional or corrected identifications and two revised commentaries.

The recording is on YouTube at the link below.  No password is necessary.

https://youtu.be/vN99Ma4ptbU

WESTERN CALIFORNIA IN EARLY SPRING – Matt Andrews – 17 Sept Zoom Recording

Our Chairman Matt Andrews shared more of his superb photographs from a recent foreign adventure. This time it was western California in the early Spring. Sequoia National Park with birds, animals and other fauna from the desert north of Los Angeles to montane species further north and then coastal and marine fauna from San Francisco travelling south along the Pacific Highway back down to LA.

To view a recording of Matt’s talk, follow the link below and put in the link when  prompted to do so.

https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/rk-NWRIWQsShlPmh_8DiYf-8OTDAsqYRrFdKuXBhKvhY9WSTYGT_1kAFVJdk4f69.Zr1ROlB5gTled4jS?startTime=1726598135000

Passcode: !w*%H6l#

THE FLORA (AND FAUNA) OF SWITZERLAND’S UPPER ENGADINE VALLEY – Tim Arnold – Tues 24 Sept – Zoom recording

This year Tim Arnold visited the valley early in the Alpine spring and found a wide variety of flowers below the retreating snow line, helped by the mixed geology of the area. In his talk he shared some of the floral highlights of his visit and gave us some fascinating insights into the way the geology and aspect influence the flora together with the butterflies, moths, birds and mammals that inhabit this wonderful valley.

To view a recording of Tim’s talk, follow the link below and put in the passcode when  prompted to do so.

https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/Jg0-H6iI8lrr1Mlp_y5K_RUra17RYsb4hgeA9JWuhLPQlOE-D6xso6ZsIU4elPOy.sS7_0EJtIK32ijDi

Passcode: 8sPv4=6=

Save Wolverton’s Swifts and Martins – MKNHS talk 10 Sept 2024 – Recording

On Tuesday 10 September, Paul Duberry and Emma Rix gave a very interesting presentation about the Save Wolverton’s Swifts and Martins group – why it was set up and what it does. 
This local conservation group has only been running for a few years but has already achieved great results for swifts and house martins.

To view the recording, go to:  https://youtu.be/wgzIsxmWzXk

and if you would like more information about the group and its work, write to swsm@btinternet.com

Members’ Night Thursday 3rd September – Recording

For our first meeting back at the Cruck Barn we were treated to three talks from Gary Fowler, Julie Cuthbert and Martin Kincaid. To view a recording of the contributions from Gary and Martin, click on the link below. Due to the sensitivity of the site/subject, Julie’s contribution is not included in the recording.

https://youtu.be/CucZNXfd_to

Note that the Zoom recording has been transferred to YouTube, so no password is needed.

 AGRICULTURE ON MARS AND THE MOON! Prof. Nigel Mason – Tues. March 5th – Recording

Nigel Mason is Professor of Molecular Physics at the University of Kent and an eminent astrobiologist. He examined the feasibility of human agriculture in our solar system, the problems involved and work currently underway to try to address them.

The Zoom recording can be viewed using the link and password below. It will be available for 30 days.

https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/Fm0jVCdH5uI38xva80xasm7wF4g_LWBZk7wZ2a134ZOwO2rseUTteG1fqMd-ph_U.h6oVThyVXJz3OGUo

Passcode: #8FqRFYB

RIDING THE WIND AND SUN FOR 50 YEARS & OTHER STORIES – Dr Derek Taylor – 30th January – Recording

Our very own Dr Derek Taylor has worked in renewables and ultra-low energy building design for over 50 years. In his talk he explained how renewable energy has grown from almost zero to become the dominant form of energy and the least expensive form of electricity.

The recording will be available to view for 30 days from the date of the talk.
Follow the link and put in the pass code when asked to do so.

https://us02web.zoom.us/rec/share/jnaTZV75J9eHfWNZl3mF9KVe3or0W4iyEgSWN-p5xgvoscDOjjfJqrE81JsAGmkF.PqjJLj5G6ZJ89lPJ

Passcode: 712^7Uud

The Secret Life of Flies – Recording of talk by Erica McAlister Tuesday 10th October

Erica McAlister is Senior Curator of flies at London’s Natural History Museum and a national authority on Diptera. She is the current President of the Amateur Entomologists Society. We were very fortunate to welcome her on Tuesday to give us an insight into these much maligned and misunderstood insects.

There were problems with the sound for the Zoom participants which were also on the Zoom recording. Following a lot of work by Tim Arnold to boost the sound and add subtitles, the recording is now available as a YouTube video which can be viewed here:

https://youtu.be/2zrXBM_olOE.

For the best view, use headphones and switch on the subtitles.

MKNHS Book Review Evening: Book List from 9th November 2021

BOOK REVIEWERS & BOOKS REVIEWED

Below is a list of books which were reviewed at the MKNHS book review evening on 9th November.

2 of the reviews had to be left out or cut short due to lack of time. These are available as links:
Ian Saunders’ review of Ghosts of Gondwana, by George Gibbs
Mike LeRoy’s review of Swifts and Us, by Sarah Gibson

  1. Julie Lane
    The Seabird’s Cry: the Lives and Loves of Puffins, Gannets and Other Ocean Voyagers – Adam Nicholson  (2018: William Collins)
    [Winner of the Wainwright Prize 2018; USA title: ‘The Seabird’s Cry: the Lives and Loves of the Planet’s Great Ocean Voyagers’]
  2. Charles Kessler
    English Pastoral: An Inheritance – James Reebanks
    (2020: Allen Lane/Penguin Books)
  3. Sue Weatherhead
    Butterflies (British Wildlife Collection, Number 10) – Martin Warren
    (2021: Bloomsbury)
  4. Tim Arnold
    Much Ado About Mothing: A year intoxicated by Britain’s rare and remarkable moths
    James Lowen
    (2021: Bloomsbury)
  5. Mary Sarre
    The Consolation of Nature: Spring in the time of the Coronavirus –Michael McCarthy,
    Jeremy Mynott and Peter Marren
    (2020: Hodder)
    A Claxton Diary: Further Field Notes from a Small Planet – Mark Cocker
    (2019: Jonathan Cape)
  6. Ian Saunders
    Beasts Before Us: The untold story of mammal origins and evolution – Elsa Panciroli
    (2021: Bloomsbury Sigma publishing)
    Ghosts of Gondwana: The history of life in New Zealand – George Gibbs
    (Fully revised edition, 2016: Potton and Burton)
  7. Colin Docketty
    A Kaleidoscope of Butterflies: a celebration of Britain’s 59 species – Jonathan Bradley
    (2020: Merlin Unwin Books, Ludlow)
  8. Mike LeRoy
    Swifts and Us: The Life of the Bird that Sleeps in the Sky – Sarah Gibson
    (2021: William Collins)

Members’ Book Evening booklist 13 October 2020

At the Members’ Book Evening on 13 October, a wide range of books were presented and recommended by members and are listed below. They include recent publications and old favourites that people return to year after year. Some examine current environmental issues, some provide useful advice and guidance, others were chosen for their writing style, or artwork. There’s something for everyone! A big “Thank You” to all the contributors. Enjoy!

For books currently out of print, companies such as ABE Books (https://www.abebooks.co.uk/ )  were recommended for second hand copies; NHBS ( https://www.nhbs.com/ ) supplies a huge range of books on Wildlife, Ecology and Conservation as well as the ubiquitous Amazon…

The Orchid Hunter by Lief Bersweden (2018: Short Books Ltd)

A Natural History of the Hedgerow and ditches, dykes, and dry stone walls by John Wright, (2016: Profile Books Ltd)

Woodland Plants by Heather and Robin Tanner (1987: Impact Books)

Four Hedges: A Gardener’s Chronicle by Clare Leighton (2010: Little Toller Books)

Rebirding by Benedict Macdonald (2019: Pelagic Publishing)

The Wildlife Pond Book by Jules Howard (2019: Bloomsbury Publishing)

Wilding – the return of nature to a British Farm by Isabella Tree (2018: Picador)

There is No Planet B: A handbook for the make or break years by Mike Berners-Lee (2019: Cambridge University Press)

How bad are bananas? The carbon footprint of everything by Mike Berners-Lee (Profile Books: 2010/ revised updated & expanded edition 2020)

The Burning Question: We Can’t Burn Half the World’s Oil, Coal and Gas. So How Do We Quit? by Mike Berners-Lee and Duncan Clark (2013: Profile Books )

Wonderland, a year of Britain’s wildlife by Brett Westwood and Stephen Moss (2017: John Murray Press)

The Invention of Nature – The Adventures of Alexander von Humboldt: The Lost Hero of Science by Andrea Wulf (2015: John Murray press)

Curlew Moon by Mary Colwell (illustrated by Jessica Holm) (2018: HarperCollins) Reviewed by Jenny Mercer in the April 2020 edition of the Magpie

The Wood For The Trees: The long view of nature from a small wood  by Richard Fortey (2016: William Collins)

The Secret Life of Birds by Colin Tudge (2009: Penguin)

The New Where to Photograph Wildlife in Britain by Mike Lane (2005: Mike Lane, FRPS )

Great White Shark by Richard Ellis and John E. McCosker  (1991: Stanford University Press and HarperCollins)

The Shepherd’s Life by James Rebanks (2015: Penguin)

Deep Country:  Five Years in the Welsh Hills  by Neil Ansell  (2012:  Penguin)

Diary of a Young Naturalist by Dara McAnulty (2020: Little Toller Press

 

Linda Murphy

MKNHS Members evening 22 September – The State of Nature 2019: notes of follow-up discussion

Eleven members attended this evening. First of all, we reviewed the list of suggestions for action put forward at the meeting on March 10th 2020, before considering a few of these in small groups and then pooling our thoughts.

The March meeting had been a discussion based around a presentation about the findings of the National Biodiversity Network’s 2019 report on the State of Nature (https://nbn.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/State-of-Nature-2019-UK-full-report.pdf)

Two groups spent most of the time on the Theme ‘Communicating our Message’. They agreed that Facebook was a key way of communicating information about the Society particularly to younger people to increase their interest in, and knowledge of, nature. It was felt to be  important to widen our range of methods of communication to reach different audiences, rather than attracting ‘more people like us’.  One member indicated willingness to help set up a Society Facebook presence. The local press has been a useful avenue for publicising the Society in the past but it was note noted that the Citizen carried less news than hitherto and distribution within Milton Keynes was patchy.

The theme ‘Conservation Organisations/Projects’ was explored. This could also form another line of communication and opportunity to engage a wider audience by publicising opportunities to get involved in a variety of organisations and projects locally, related to the protection and enhancement of wildlife and wider conservation issues. For example, the ‘Bats in Churches’ project, highlighted at a previous members’ evening, needs volunteers to survey churches in Milton Keynes in 2021; and the Global Bird Weekend on 17/18 October 2020 is looking to sign up as many people as possible to record bird species seen on those days in aid of Birdlife International’s Campaign to ‘STOP ILLEGAL BIRD TRADE’.

We can also publicise relevant reports and campaigns on our website such as:
– the WWF living planet report (see Living Planet Report 2020).
– the Wildlife Trusts’ initial response to the Government’s White Paper on Planning, which proposes fundamental changes to planning and would limit opportunities for public responses (see Preliminary Analysis of the Planning White Paper).
– the Wildlife Trust’s proposals for ‘Wild-belts’ to ‘Rewild the planning system’ (see Rewild the Planning System). This was covered in The Guardian 17 September 2020: see Wild Belts.
– the new RSPB report: ‘A Lost Decade for Nature: How the UK has missed its targets for nature.  Why we must act now to revive our world’ (see A Lost Decade for Nature).

The theme of ‘Plans and planning’ was picked up in the third group which examined the theme of ‘Recording’. All participants in that group regularly record and discussed how records can be ‘made to count’. Many recording schemes are run by organisations devoted to specific groups of species, and they take records via specific apps or iRecord and are fed into County Records Offices such as BMERC. For example, birders are urged to submit records to Bucks Bird Club as these are regularly passed to BMERC. Those who live outside Bucks can check out their local Bird Clubs or use BTO Birdtrack. The latter can be used for records made on holiday in the UK and in Europe. The recording advice available on the Society website was noted. It was agreed that ‘common’ species such as moles or hedgehogs or house sparrows often don’t get recorded and we should make an effort to include them. The case for the importance of local recording is the fact that local records have to be consulted for planning applications, hence the relationship between these two themes.

Further general discussion touched on how to discourage littering and reduce use of single use/’disposable’ plastics, and palm oil.

We concluded by following Ann Lambley’s suggestion to cheer ourselves up by focussing on a beautiful wildlife image such as a wood in autumn!

Notes by Linda Murphy

When Birds Sing – presentation at Linford Lakes NR 18th October 2017

FoLLNR logo

FoLLNR logo

Wednesday 18th October 2017,

Special Presentation from

Saffron Summerfield.

19:30 hrs doors open @ 19:00hrs.

Seats cost £3.50, no booking required.

Refreshments available. 

WHEN BIRDS SING 

A digitally illustrated Talk

When Saffron Summerfield – Singer/Musician/Sound Artiste and lifetime Bird Watcher – was Artist in Residence at Rye Harbour Nature Reserve she was intrigued  when a Robin sang close to her window when she played the guitar. She recorded the Robin and created a duet with his song and her guitar and so her journey of research and discovery on Bird Songs and Calls began.

Just why does a small bird  (Marsh Warbler) ’collect’ up to 250 other bird songs and calls on its migratory path from Africa to Northern Europe thereby creating an astonishing ‘Songline’ of its journey each year?

How many composers have been inspired by listening to bird song?

Bird songs and calls are frequently referenced in Folk Songs from around the World.

Why does the Dawn Chorus have such an emotional and calming effect on some Humans?

The craze for keeping caged Goldfinches for their magical singing voice in the second half of the nineteenth century nearly did for the poor bird.

What is the connection between Pachelbel’s Canon in D and Bird Song…

This fascinating and revealing talk is digitally presented with many of her own field recordings and photos and all levels of interest is catered for.

www.motherearthmusic.co.uk/gigs

Books recommended by society members for our book review evening 15th September

 

Cocker, Mark (2014)  Claxton: Field Notes from a Small Planet Jonathan Cape

The book consists of 140 columns over a 12 year period from The Guardian, The Guardian Weekly and other publications. It’s written like a journal and most of pieces are based on his experiences and observations in and around the village of Claxton, Norfolk although writings about other places to which he has travelled, are included.  Mark Cocker says ‘Claxton is above everything a book about place, but is also a celebration of the way in which a particular location can give shape and meaning to one’s whole outlook.’

Contribution by Mervyn Dobbin

 

Trilobite! : Eyewitness to Evolution by Richard Fortey, HarperCollins Flamingo 2001, ISBN 0 00 655138 6.

Contribution by Steve Brady

 

The Dragonfly diaries – The story of Europe’s first Dragonfly Sanctuary

by Ruary Mackenzie Dodds

 

Gods of the Morning: A Birds Eye View of a Highland Year

By John Lister Kaye

Contribution by Julie Lane

 

H is for Hawk – Helen Macdonald

Published 2014, Vintage

ISBN 978-0-099-57545-0

Look forward to seeing you at Hazeley Wood, 10.30 on Tuesday.

Contribution by Jean Cooke

Six books recommended by Mike LeRoy (see below – apologies for the layout but there was some annoying formatting that I couldn’t get rid of!)

 

    1. ‘Meadowland: The private life of an English Field’
  • On Midsummer’s eve he had had what he describes as “one of the strangest moments of my life” (page 143) … but I will leave you to find out about that for yourselves.
  • In July, he fits a T-bar cutter alongside his ancient tractor to start cutting his meadow, but it is broken irreparably on a stone. He can’t get a replacement for days and all his neighbours are hard at work mowing their hay, so can’t help him. He gets out his scythe and over four days scythes 3 acres, getting up at dawn and working right through, with bloodied hands and aching limbs. “Nothing in the last ten years of farming has given me such satisfaction.” (page 173). He found out why hay-cutters tied up their trouser legs when they were scything. A vole ran up his leg and only vigorous, noisy dancing shook it off before it climbed all the way up his trousers.
  • John Lewis-Stempel shares one of my pet hates: people who move to live in the countryside, then subject the roadside verges outside their hedges to be closely-mowed lawns.
  • Sometimes he gets a surprise: “There was an unexpected visitor in the field today. As I walked down the bank in the morning haze the blackbirds were clamouring their liquid alarm, then: dismissive wasp-yellow eyes. Scaly yellow legs. Black metal talons. All these things flashed before me. I am not sure who was the more surprised, the female Sparrowhawk or I as she came up over the hedge. I could feel the displaced breath from her wings as she flicked up over my head, then away, a sullen grey bullet. Certainly I was the more scared; for malevolent verve the Sparrowhawk is unrivalled. They are always coiled, ready, dangerous. When the first gunsmiths needed a name for a small firearm they settled on the falconry term for a male Sparrowhawk. A musket. …” (page 99)
  • Once, when watching, a shrew runs over his leg and he watches it for ages: “In the shaded but desiccated land of the hedge bottom, where I am crouched, a dun shrew runs over my leg. She is careless of my presence and pokes around in the old leaves in an amphetamine frenzy. Over the next ten minutes this tiny, long-trunked mammal puts on a horror show, although one can only admire her murderous dexterity. She dismembers five beetles with rapid movements of her jaws, before rubbing and rolling a grey slug with her snout, presumably to tenderize it. Occasionally she nips it; her saliva contains a poison that immobilises and eventually kills the victim. She also wolfs down woodlice, preferring the Philoscia muscorum louse to Porcellio scaber. Between the courses she washes assiduously. No dunce, she refuses to snack on a large black beetle that looks capable of fighting back.” (pages 129/130)
  • He can write … vividly … ecstatically. He tells his account of his meadow taking the months of the year in sequence. His writing is of closely-observed nature, mixed with snippets of history, country lore and knowledge of wildlife. This is a man who watches nature for an hour or more, sat still under a field hedge. He knows his patch of land intimately. He feels the back of a hedgehog … and gets one of its spines up his finger-nail. He observes wildlife at close quarters. He works out that the Moles straight gallery parallel to a ditch enables it to pass through soft ground full of worms to eat, but not too damp to flood (page 64). His description of the call of the Wood Pigeon is (page 131) “take-two-cows, taffy-take-two”.
  • ‘Meadowland’ is a book by a countryman and farmer whose family have lived in the same Herefordshire valley for at least four centuries. John Lewis-Stempel is also a writer and a highly-observant naturalist. The book is ‘Meadowland: The private life of an English Field’. He lives on and works a small-holding in which is a 5.7 acre field called Lower Meadow, a wet and rather unproductive flood-meadow skirted by the little river Escley. I often used to travel through the broad valley where he lives. The Golden Valley is as far west as you can get in Herefordshire and to its immediate west are the Black Mountains of Wales with Offa’s Dyke Path leading across its ridges on its way north to Hay-on-Wye.
  • by John Lewis-Stempel (2014: Doubleday)
  • ‘Meadowland: The private life of an English Field’ by John Lewis-Stempel (2014: Doubleday).
  •  
  • ‘The Moth Snowstorm: Nature & Joy’Former environment editor of The Independent, winner of an RSPB award for ‘outstanding services to conservation’ and awards from BTO and ZSL, in 2008 Michael McCarthy wrote the captivating book ‘Say Goodbye to the Cuckoo’. In his new book, ‘The Moth Snowstorm: Nature & Joy’, he intertwines personal experiences, both testing and joyful, which have shaped his life. Above all he aims to explain how crucial is our relationship with nature.
  • by Michael McCarthy (2015: John Murray)

 

    1. ‘The Naming of the Shrew: A curious history of Latin names’John Wright’s book is all about the names we give to living things. He explains the long history of their Latin names, why they are like this and how they have changed. He tells us about Linneaeus and many other fathers of taxonomy and finishes with challenging material about taxonomy, cladistics and what difference DNA is making to our understanding of species and how we name them.
  •  
  • by John Wright (2014: Bloomsbury)

 

    1. ‘The Fly Trap’‘The Fly Trap’ takes you into the remote world of its Swedish author on the remote island where he lives and to his absolute focus on finding Hoverflies. It is a wacky book, showing a wry sense of humour that also takes us back to the extraordinary lives of some significant entomologists such as René Malaise. It is a meandering but engrossing account.
  •            
  • by Frederik Sjöberg (2014: Particular Books)

 

    1. ‘The Ash Tree’Oliver Rackham probably knew more about ancient woodlands, their history and ecology, than anyone. He died in February this year and completed this small book only last year. He was a brilliant botanist, plant ecologist and historian and had a close knowledge of plant pathology. He had long warned of the risks of importing plants from all around the world. He once wrote “The greatest threat to trees and forests is the tendency of Homo sapiens deliberately to mix up all the world’s trees and inadvertently to mix up all the world’s tree diseases”. When he wrote ‘The Ash Tree’ this enabled him to say about the Government’s belated response to Ash dieback disease “I told you so”; but the book does much more than that, it tells of the history and importance of this tree, with a candid view of its future.
  •  
  • by Oliver Rackham (2014: Little Toller)

 

    1. ‘Nature in Towns & Cities’David Goode was once deputy to Derek Ratcliffe when he was Chief Scientist to the Nature Conservancy (now Natural England) when they took on the government about thoughtless tree planting across the rare Flow Country peat bogs of northern Scotland. Then he set up the London Ecology Unit which pioneered urban ecology that had a huge influence on good ecological management of London’s open spaces. His career concluded as director of environment to Ken Livingstone when he was Mayor of London. His book ‘Nature in Towns & Cities’ pulls together all this knowledge and on-the-ground experience in a volume in the prestigious Collins New Naturalist series. Milton Keynes gets some positive mentions, and a map of our greenspace and a photo of Shenley Wood. He is more of a bird and ecology specialist than an entomologist, but there is a limit to how much can be fitted in such a wide-ranging and informative book as this. It has been described as the best book on urban ecology. It is certainly readable and informative and probably well deserves that accolade.
  •  
  • by David Goode (2014: William Collins, New Naturalist)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Man-eaters of Kumaon

by Jim Corbett

Contribution by Linda Murphy

 

The Old Ways – a journey on foot

By Robert Macfarlane

Contribution by Viola Reed

 

2 books by Roger Deakin

‘Waterlog: A swimmer’s Journey Through Brittain’

‘Wildwood: A journey through Trees’

 

Contribution by Michèle Welborn

 

I have not included the full details of all these books but they are easy enough to find online.

Julie Lane