Typical owl – Long-eared Owl

The Long-eared Owl (Asio otus) is a typical owl, which means it is a member of the Strigidae family. On a flying visit to RSPB Saltolme on Teesside (a dry and winter sunny trip this second trip there for us), we headed over to the known roosting sites of the birds on the reserve. The noticeboards had said they were not “showing”. However, a warden was watching a tree intently and so we followed suit, but nothing came to sight.

Heading up the path, the warden spotted one in a dense woody thicket, it was only just visible with binoculars at about 15 metres distance and certainly you couldn’t see it without optical aids. He directed our sight to it, but Mrs Sciencebase spotted a second to its right and even more fiercely obscured by branches and foliage. I got a record shot of the first zoomed to 600 mm, f/6.7, t 1/2000s, ISO 12800.

It was dusky by now and very little light in the thicket. We needed to get back on the road, so couldn’t wait the hour or two before they took flight to begin hunting and had to leave before any significant Starling murmurations, although we did see a wonderful sunset of the chemical works! More of those in the next blog post.

Photographed at RSPB Saltholme

Pipes and poppies

Cambridgeshire Caledonian Pipe Band lead the 2018 Centenary Remembrance Parade along Cottenham High Street, 11th November 2018. With the Cottenham and Rampton branch of the Royal British Legion, veterans local scouting groups, members of the public, and others.

Remembrance Day 2018

An estimated 800+ turned out for the Centenary Remembrance Day parade in Cottenham, 11th November 2018. Very moving ceremony and an afternoon evening to be filled with exhibitions, tree dedication, music, the Roll of Honour, The Last Post, WWI Beacon and Church bells ringing out for peace.

A few snaps from Rampton – The Homecoming exhibition.

It was an intensely emotional weekend. It was not a celebration of war. It was not a party. It was a wake. And, wakes are full of sadness but can be full of joy.

Poppies of remembrance

2018 marked the centenary of the end of World War I, which concluded on November 11, 1918, with the signing of the Armistice agreement. In 2018, many countries around the world held commemorative events to mark the 100th anniversary of the end of the war, and to honor the millions of people who lost their lives or were affected by the conflict.

The First World War was a significant event in world history, which resulted in the deaths of millions of people, the reshaping of Europe’s political and social landscape, and the beginning of a new era in international relations. The events of World War I continue to influence the world to this day, and studying its history is important to gain an understanding of the global dynamics that have shaped the modern world.

Poppies are a symbol of remembrance of those who died in World War I and subsequent wars. The tradition of wearing a poppy began in 1921, inspired by the poem “In Flanders Fields” by Canadian Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae. The poem describes the poppies growing on the battlefield where many soldiers died, and the red colour of the poppies is associated with the bloodshed of war.

The wearing of poppies is particularly common in the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, where it is part of the commemorations of Remembrance Day (November 11) or Anzac Day (April 25). The poppies are sold by the Royal British Legion in the UK and other organizations in other countries to raise funds for the welfare of veterans and their families.

The poppy has become an enduring symbol of the sacrifices made in war and is often worn as a sign of respect and gratitude for those who have served and died for their country. It serves as a reminder of the devastating effects of war and the importance of working towards peace.

Flickr off!

Despite what they said when they bought out flickr, looks like the new owners are going to limit what you can do with a free account. Bottom line is you only get to keep and show your 1000 most recent photos on the service. I have well over 7000 snaps on there some dating back to 2005 when I first signed up for an account. Either way, it accounts for a mere 1.4% of the 1 terabyte of storage they allowed free users to use up until now. I’m not paying them for storage, I already spend money on cloud storage and if they cannot make ads pay, tough.

Thankfully, now you can download all of your data and all of your photos. Mine amounts to several gigabytes and 15 or so zip files. All safely on my PC now.

Next step is to find a way to “run” my old Flickr galleries from these zip files once I’ve uploaded them to my web server. I will update once I’ve found the tools to do that. In the meantime, I recommend that you also download all your Flickr data, especially if you haven’t got the originals of all the photos and videos you’ve uploaded over the years.

Retro Gaming Day

My good friend Andrew Fell (trustee at Cottenham Community Centre, CCC, and volunteer at the UK Computer Museum in Cambridge) organised and ran independently of the museum a very successful retro gaming day at CCC.

Rining handsets

It was a delight for gamers young and old and dozens of them packed the back hall to see everything from the pioneering Intellivision and Spectrum consoles to the classic Commodore, Atari, Nintendo, Sega, and BBC Micro machines, as well as a Virtual Boy with its 3D display based that used two spinning mirrors to give each eye a different view of the display.

Sonically yours

The gamers and any +1s (and their kids) all got to partake of cream teas and cakes provided by Mrs Sciencebase and her staff in our coffee shop.

Chuckie Egg on the BBC

All in a very successful afternoon, in fact, one of our most successful non-musical events at CCC ever and all topped off with an evening viewing of the Spielberg film “Ready Player One”, which featured a vintage (1970s) VHS machine loaned by the Museum in the final scene.

Senior moment

Pleased I was to see two references to Rush the band. Specifically, one of the closing scenes features a poster of their “2112” album and one of the heroes wearing a 2112 teeshirt. As fans will know, 2112 was one of the band’s early concept albums and tells a messianic tale of a dystopian future. It is no small coincidence that Ready Player One tells a similar tale.

The next generation

Anyway, aside from the couple of hundred people (possibly more) who came through the Community Centre doors and enjoyed the digital and sconic feast, the event also raised a generous surplus for CCC coffers and a donation to the Museum was also made. Well done to Andy and the team. I’m sure the popularity of this event means he will be itching to run a second such event.

GamesMeister Andrew Fell with the Ferguson Videostar Deluxe that features in the 2018 Steven Spielberg film “Ready Player One”

Amazingly, Andrew and his able assistants got all the machines booted up, kept them running without a glitch, without a single fuse blown or gadget broken, right up until it was Game Over.

Fergie

Virtual Boy at heart

Limnephilus decipiens, a northern caddisfly

We were out for a dog walk at RSPB Ouse Fen (VC29) on a bright, sunny day. There various birds around, including Marsh Harriers, Kestrels, Reed Buntings, Bearded Reedlings, a Green Sandpiper, Wigeon, Tufted Duck, and the first winter thrushes we’ve seen this season (flock of Fieldfare).
This fellow sitting on the gate sneck caught my eye too, Limnephilus decipiens, one of the many northern caddisflies. I only had my 150-600 mm zoom, so had to lean against the barbed wire about 3 m along from the gate to get the shot, hence the very short depth of field.

A woodland fit for a kinglet

The Goldcrest (Regulus regulus) is the UK’s joint smallest bird (alongside the Firecrest, R. ignicapillus. They’re both usually about 90 millimetres long and weighing approximately 9 grams.

Both species favour pine trees, but you see them in other wooded areas and occasionally in gardens. I say “you see them”. But, they’re so small and flighty that it is quite hard to spot them and even harder to get decent photographs of them in their natural habitat.

They dart about in the darkest recesses of the woods, apparent only through their high-pitched whistling tweets and occasional flash of gold. So, I was quite pleased to catch one Goldcrest in the sunlight in one of our nearby woodlands, Rampton Spinney, about eight kilometres north of Cambridge.

The sunlight meant I could have a short shutter speed with the intention of freezing movement without the ISO being too high and the pictures noisy. These three shots were taken with a Canon 6D, with a Sigma 150-600mm zoom lens at full stretch, f/5.6, ISO 2500 and a shutter speed of 1/1500 second.

 

The psychology of reunions

I just spent the weekend in another city with a bunch of people most of whom I hadn’t seen for twenty years. All-but-one-or-two of those people I met for the first time in another country when we worked together on a kids’ summer camp. It was a wonderful reunion, none of us has changed a bit…on the inside.

We didn’t stop talking at each other and laughing over the old stories (of which there were approximately 10476 or was it 10477, I lose count). We laughed and scoffed over the old photographs of us looking smooth-skinned and youthful and in the way we all know we still are…on the inside.

A word did come to mind though as we gassed and laughed and drank.

Disorientation.

Ironic really as way back then, before setting out for those foreign shores we had been coraled albeit separately in the Spring of ’88, for an orientation course by the organisers of these student jollies that told us a little about the process of getting there, working and living there and how to think about what to do in terms of travel if any of us had time and cash left afterwards.

Disorientation.

The vertiginous feeling of reuniting with very familiar faces with whom we had all had a deep friendship so long ago. Some had stayed in touch of course and there had been occasional sightings and visits over the winding course of three decades. But, this reunited group was much of the hardcore of Brits who had corresponded fervently for weeks and months and sometimes years after our American rite of passage. We were, back then, perhaps clinging on to the exuberance of that summer, trying not to admit that we were all back in Blighty and student studies had to be begun again or, perish the thought, jobs sought.

Disorientation at how after 30 years we mostly all had families, some of whom were grown up. We had all taken very disparate routes to other foreign shores for long and short trips. We had all eventually got very different jobs and made some amazing career choices that might never have come to mind when we were working in 96 degree heat among those not-so-lonesome pines.

We had all constructed new circles of friends with whom we had all created strong bonds in the intervening years. But, there was this feeling when we all looked at each and talked and drank that although our heads were full of the faces of newer friends and the experiences we had all had since we last met, that this strange shared experience of a summer working on a kids camp in West Virginia had taken us down so many country roads and yet we were still in the same place…on the inside.

Strange how nostalgia hits you in the stomach and brings a lump to your throat and puts a teardrop in your eye…almost Heaven.

Oh, and one more thing, I didn’t go bare-chested at any point during the reunion…despite their endless demands, hahaha.

Afterthought: Readers will no doubt have got the feeling that we all just picked up where we left off all those years ago. It’s true. And, almost everyone has similar experiences to report when being reunited with old friends. It is amazing that it seems to work like that. I think the “Dunbar number” theory about how many people a human can “keep” in their head in terms of social connection needs to be updated. Fundamentally, there may well be a limit to the number in any single clique or group to which we belong, but I reckon there is a layer above that. We can perhaps belong to many different groups and have a large number of connections in each of those too. Well, that’s my experience.

Then, there is the disorientation one feels when those different groups overlap or meet. That whole “So….how do *you* two know each other?” syndrome. It’s a fascinating social PhD to be undertaken, I reckon.

Inevitably, I wrote a song.

Cloudy night of autumnal moths

We have recently had some clear, cold, and damp nights and some rainy nights recently. The scientific moth trap has been running, but with very few lepidoptera making an appearance. I have been observing one or two specimens only each morning. That said, four species new to me in a couple of weeks and all added to my butterflies and moths gallery. However, the evening of 25th October 2018 was cloudy and thus a little warmer and while I cannot say that the trap was heaving this morning, there had been a few interesting species in the dark and one or two more present by morning.

Feathered Thorn (Colotois pennaria)
White Point (Mythimna albipuncta)
Green Brindled Crescent (Allophyes oxyacanthae)
Common Marbled Carpet (Dysstroma truncata), dark form
Common Marbled Carpet (Dysstroma truncata), light form
Feathered Thorn (Colotois pennaria)

There were two very different colourations of Common Marbled Carpet (Dysstroma truncata), Green Brindled Crescent (Allophyes oxyacanthae), two differently sized White Point (Mythimna albipuncta), and a rather interesting autumnal flyer, a male Feathered Thorn (Colotois pennaria). Also, not pictured, November agg (Epirrita dilutata), not seen any of the underwings recently, but there was a Lesser Yellow Underwing (Noctua comes), and finally, a Turnip (Agrotis segetum).

In that bottom photo of the Feathered Thorn I had to clone out all the yellow and white dog hairs that were on the carpet to allow the moth to stand out in the photo!