The Second Ladybird book of British Birds #11 – The Treecreeper
“The Tree-Creeper is a little bird with a long, curved beak and quite a long tail.” So says The Second Ladybird book of British Birds and their nests.
“The Tree-Creeper is a little bird with a long, curved beak and quite a long tail.” So says The Second Ladybird book of British Birds and their nests.
Walking through The Regent’s Park I notice a woman with her hands deep in a bag. She brings out a handful of …
Pheasants then and now.
I’m in central London walking along The Regent’s Canal in The Regent’s Park. I’m shocked to see there are Herons only a …
Nuthatches in the 1950s and Nuthatches now.
One night in the Cairngorms means there’s a chance to see Red Squirrels, Pine Martens, Red Deer and yet it’s the fungi …
Here’s a Lapwing in a Ladybird book from 1955. Is what it says still true?
In London Zoo they keep penguins. There are regular talks where Humboldt Penguins are fed for entertainment. It’s a spectacle and the …
The Chiff Chaff – 60 years ago and now.
Have you heard of the Sumatran Tiger? The subspecies of Tiger than only lives on the Indonesian island of Sumatra? Yes? There …
In 1955 this is what my Ladybird book had to say about the Great Tit: Is it still true?: The Great Tit …
Killerton is an unusual National Trust property. Unlike many of the others its story doesn’t appear to involve slavery, death and exploitation …
If Jackdaws could talk, what would they say to us?
I see a dragonfly on a post at RSPB Old Moor: And then I see another dragonfly on a post at RSPB …
Here’s the page on The Greenfinch from The Ladybird book of British Birds and their Nests from 1955 from my continuing Ladybird …
There’s a flock of Long-Tailed Bushtits just passing through. They are just like fuzzy lollipops. I like the detail of the bright …
How are Chaffinches doing 60 years after this Ladybird book?
I loved having a magnifying glass as a child. I had one with a blue handle, with a false Parker pen clip …
Since this Ladybird book was published we’ve been to the moon, we’ve entered the computer age, there’s been huge urbanisation, the human population has more than doubled and we’ve caused mass destruction of habitat and extinction of species. What’s happened to Swallows in that time?
There are many huge Parasol Mushrooms in this upland grassland. They are growing in a faerie ring over 60 metres wide and …
What has changed since this Ladybird book was published in the 1950s?
Farming is a tough business. I often describe farmers as ‘scratching a living from the land’. There’s the weather, uncertain prices, problems …