The Orkney Museum
I love the Orkney Museum in the centre of Kirkwall, opposite St Magnus Cathedral. One of the mind-blowing exhibits is a carved …
I love the Orkney Museum in the centre of Kirkwall, opposite St Magnus Cathedral. One of the mind-blowing exhibits is a carved …
Walking along an aerial boardwalk I see wonderful drawings of birds routered into the handrail. I love this one of a Blue …
Today I’m in Exminster in Devon looking at a Lapwing across the sodden fields.
There’s a lost sock impaled on the barbed wire at Noup Head. The other one is probably still inside your duvet cover …
On Westray the ruins of old buildings litter the farming landscape. Memories of the lives lived in joy and hardship linger around …
The rock pools of Westray are magnificent underwater gardens. Here, red Coral Weed makes a frondy jungle.
I didn’t even see this Razorbill on the cliffs last summer at Noup Head until The Puffin Whisperer pointed it out to …
There are corks jammed tight into the cracks in the rock in this Westray cave.
Forty years ago on 17 August 1976, when I was a 12 year old boy, I saw Cormorants while on holiday in …
Fulmars look like gulls but aren’t. Look closer and they have strange adapted bills with tubes on their noses. Their countershading colouration …
I was 13 years old when I saw a Mute Swan from the train. How do I remember that I was on …
With the weight of flagstones on the roof timbers, a Westray roof needs love and attention to keep it keeping the rain …
Drips of water run down the cliffs on Westray.
Walking along Westray’s rocky shores through a rock arch and into and out of caves we come across this dripping waterfall with …
Wandering along the coast of Westray it’s sometimes hard to tell what’s in the cliffs below. Only when there’s a promontory can …
A Puffin at the Castle o’ Burrian as the low evening sunlight streams through the grey clouds.
I love the Orkney Museum. Every time I go there I see something else that I’d bypassed on all previous visits. Here’s …
Dunnocks are beautiful birds but it’s hard to tell they’re so beautiful because they keep in the shadows, in hedges and under …
The Common Earthball is also known by the charming common name of the Pigskin Poison Puffball.
Editing a photograph from last summer makes me want to be on those cliffs again with these picnickers.
Here’s my nature notebook entry from 1976 about Jays: ‘You can not get near them,’ I said. It’s still true. However, with the wonder of modern telephoto lenses, large numbers of megapixels, and heavy cropping, it appears now that you can.
The exposed rocks of Westray are endlessly fascinating even if you’re not a geologist.
Looking back at my photographs from the summer I found this one. I’m a keen photographer of the Puffins on Westray: I …
‘Scattered fish scales of Osteolepis are common at Snaky Noust.’ From the wonderful Westray Heritage Centre.