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Posted

post-8446-0-47957500-1429981394_thumb.jppost-8446-0-68995600-1429981487_thumb.jppost-8446-0-64320800-1429981561_thumb.jp

 

Disaster on the Thurne after a deadly prymnesium outbreak(still ongoing).EA have managed to move over  700000 fish to safer parts of the system.

Spent 1000s of rod hours on this river and i'm gutted.Looks a total wipeout.

Posted

How awful , such a sad sight to see.

Yep i counted 4 pike over 20lbs probably more on bottom.Spent my life fishing system.Only positive i saw was a grebe with a live fish on sounds.Even the eels are floating dead.

  • Helpful 1
Posted (edited)

attachicon.gifIMG_0177.jpgattachicon.gifIMG_0174.jpgattachicon.gifIMG_0178.jpg

Disaster on the Thurne after a deadly prymnesium outbreak(still ongoing).EA have managed to move over 700000 fish to safer parts of the system.

Spent 1000s of rod hours on this river and i'm gutted.Looks a total wipeout.

Chris. I'm Gutted for you mate.. I'm assuming it's the golden algae that normally occurs in brackish water that's causing the problems.

Steve

Edited by Winsford Soul
Posted

attachicon.gifIMG_0177.jpgattachicon.gifIMG_0174.jpgattachicon.gifIMG_0178.jpg

 

Disaster on the Thurne after a deadly prymnesium outbreak(still ongoing).EA have managed to move over  700000 fish to safer parts of the system.

Spent 1000s of rod hours on this river and i'm gutted.Looks a total wipeout.

Jeez, that's terrible. On the up side though, how the hell do you safely move 700,000 fish?

 

Anyone who says "carefully" will get a slap with a wet haddock!

  • Helpful 1
Posted

Jeez, that's terrible. On the up side though, how the hell do you safely move 700,000 fish?

 

Anyone who says "carefully" will get a slap with a wet haddock!

Russell. I once found a haddock that had swallowed a syringe. It was a drug haddock. , Just tell them they need to be in another plaice.

Steve

  • Helpful 3
Posted

Russell. I once found a haddock that had swallowed a syringe. It was a drug haddock. , Just tell them they need to be in another plaice.

Steve

They have been moving fish for a couple of weeks.EA net and move them in large tanks on trailers.Got to hand it to them i have watched them doing it several times .They are well drilled.
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Posted

Russell. I once found a haddock that had swallowed a syringe. It was a drug haddock. , Just tell them they need to be in another plaice.

Steve

Obviously a dab hand with the puns. Trying to think of some only makes me flounder. Best get me skates on then...


Posted (edited)

Martyn. Have you heard or seen any cuckoo's near you yet mate ?

Steve

Not personally Steve ... there has been a couple of sightings at Belvide last week, I thought I saw one yesterday in flight, but it was only a fleeting glimpse at distance, and the little bugger had disappeared before I could get on it with the bins ... mainly because I had a sandwich in my one hand   :D.

 

I am either eating, or Carol rings me just when something decent turns up  :D 

Edited by martyn pitt
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Posted

New in from Africa ... also in pretty good voice, a Reed Warbler 

 

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Does the grasshopper warbler make it to the UK Martyn? Saw one Wednesday, Sardinian Warblers are common as muck here, though I've yet to photograph them
Posted

Does the grasshopper warbler make it to the UK Martyn? Saw one Wednesday, Sardinian Warblers are common as muck here, though I've yet to photograph them

Yes Dave ... we get the odd one or two at the reserve, one of the scarcer visitors though, I got some cracking shots of one a couple of years back, I will stick it up if I can find it

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Posted

Here in France (western south) I first heard it one month ago.

 

Now the nightingale is singing day and night and last week I heard the oriole,one of my favorite bird. It's early this year, usually it arrives in May.

I hear nightingales all the time Philippe, but had to travel to the Jubrique area of the Serrania de Ronda to hear the cookoo. Saw a Bonelli's eagle from a few yards away take off from a cork bark oak, sadly my camera was in my pocket. Only saw one golden oriole all last year.
Posted

Here you are Dave a Grasshopper Warbler (from 2011) ... it was great to watch it singing, it's whole body trembled when it warbled its mechanical sounding call.

 

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Thanks Martyn, I heard it before I saw it, thought it was a large cricket or something as it didn't sound birdlike, I don't remember having seen them before, but then I've not spent a lot of time in Europe.
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Posted (edited)

I hear nightingales all the time Philippe,

Dave, do you mean the whole year ? In the night its singing is very very powerful and beautiful, too.

 

Wikipedia just told me that the male stopped singing at night when he has found a fiancée, I guess he must have something else to do. :)

Edited by Philippe
Posted

Dave, do you mean the whole year ? In the night its singing is very very powerful and beautiful, too.

 

Wikipedia just told me that the male stopped singing at night when he has found a fiancée, I guess he must have something else to do. :)

From late March until October maybe, they fly off to Africa for winter, though I'm sure if I was a nightingale I'd prefer to be here, but there's probably not the insects about to keep them fed. I usually hear them when I'm walking the dog as it's a very quiet neighbourhood where I live. I have seen them from my kitchen window, along with Sardinian warblers, hoopoe, chiffchaff, spotted flycatchers, bluethroats and goldcrest, as well as blue tits, sparrows, blackbirds and starlings of course.

Posted

Typing this while sitting on the back balcony where we've had the most amazing sighting just a few minutes ago.

 

Heard the warning cries of a gull overhead. Presuming it to be harrying something, I looked skyward expecting to see a buzzard. No, unbelieveably it was a flippin' osprey. Iread a couple of years back that they were occasionally seen in this region, but aren't common visitors.

 

Never seen one before (Dad took us to Loch Garten once when we lived in Scotland about 40 years ago, but the birds had quite literally flown), so I'm absolutely amazed to see one from the comfort of our own home.

 

And I can also report a first sighting of swifts, although that was somewhat tame by comparison!

  • Helpful 3
Posted

Typing this while sitting on the back balcony where we've had the most amazing sighting just a few minutes ago.

 

Heard the warning cries of a gull overhead. Presuming it to be harrying something, I looked skyward expecting to see a buzzard. No, unbelieveably it was a flippin' osprey. Iread a couple of years back that they were occasionally seen in this region, but aren't common visitors.

 

Never seen one before (Dad took us to Loch Garten once when we lived in Scotland about 40 years ago, but the birds had quite literally flown), so I'm absolutely amazed to see one from the comfort of our own home.

 

And I can also report a first sighting of swifts, although that was somewhat tame by comparison!

Nice one Russell. Cant top the osprey but can match your swift, seen my first one of the year today myself

 

Steve

Posted

Nice one Russell. Cant top the osprey but can match your swift, seen my first one of the year today myself

 

Steve

Still amazed by the sighting of the osprey. Funnily enough, my older brother is a postie in Scotland and spends as much time up the mountains as he can. He told me a couple of years back that when first seeing an osprey he thought it was a heron in both flight and shape.

 

That description always stuck with me and he's right. After expecting a buzzard (because we see them frequently here) my first thought on actually seeing the bird was that it was just a heron - except that the wings, which are just as long, are considerably narrower at the ends. And of course, the markings gave it away as soon as I could see the bird's underside properly.

 

As for the swifts, they were screaming brilliantly as they shot close passed the house at the speed of sound or whatever it is they fly at. With their arrival summer is here as far as I'm concerned.  :thumbup: 

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Posted

Today marks the 70th anniversary of liberation from the German occupying forces in the Netherlands. Coincidentally, the German war machine had its Dutch HQ in Aalsmeer, which is where I live.

 

In celebration of Liberation day, we had a convoy of WWII military vehicles start off on a mission, possibly a trip to the nearby town of Amstelveen. I shot a few video clips and strung them together. You can see the result here...

 

  • Helpful 2
Posted

Typing this while sitting on the back balcony where we've had the most amazing sighting just a few minutes ago.

 

Heard the warning cries of a gull overhead. Presuming it to be harrying something, I looked skyward expecting to see a buzzard. No, unbelieveably it was a flippin' osprey. Iread a couple of years back that they were occasionally seen in this region, but aren't common visitors.

 

Never seen one before (Dad took us to Loch Garten once when we lived in Scotland about 40 years ago, but the birds had quite literally flown), so I'm absolutely amazed to see one from the comfort of our own home.

 

And I can also report a first sighting of swifts, although that was somewhat tame by comparison!

Tame eh ?? us Swifty's have feelings you know Russell :lol:

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Posted

I thought this made a rather calming image 

 

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Martyn. And there's me thinking Carol was a calming influence on you. Not a Australian black swan

I remember a escapee turned up on the Sankey /St Helens canal in Widnes about 10 years ago

 

Steve

  • Helpful 1
Posted

Typing this while sitting on the back balcony where we've had the most amazing sighting just a few minutes ago.

 

Heard the warning cries of a gull overhead. Presuming it to be harrying something, I looked skyward expecting to see a buzzard. No, unbelieveably it was a flippin' osprey. Iread a couple of years back that they were occasionally seen in this region, but aren't common visitors.

 

Never seen one before (Dad took us to Loch Garten once when we lived in Scotland about 40 years ago, but the birds had quite literally flown), so I'm absolutely amazed to see one from the comfort of our own home.

 

And I can also report a first sighting of swifts, although that was somewhat tame by comparison!

Saw an osprey yesterday morning by the coast, first I've seen for a couple of years, the last one was being mobbed by ravens. Saw a golden oriole yesterday too, but not close enough to photo. Going out tomorrow to the mountains, so might see something to photograph whilst there.
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Posted (edited)

To commemorate VE Day....i did this picture of Margate. To the right is the harbour and far right the white building/outcrop is the Winter Gardens roof. I took it on Thursday...E Day. My Grandad George was in the Navy on a minesweeper off of Gibralter for most of WW2. He then fished out of Grimsby docks on trawlers for 40 years after the war and ended up as a maintenance man at Immingham docks working on Nuclear subs until retirement!x He told me this....from the rooftop of the Winter Gardens in Margate....12 years ago....RIP...X

 

The beach featured in the pic was used as an impromptu First Aid area....during the embarkation for D Day! He said there were thousands of troops lined up in 4 columns being shuffled onto ships taking them to France. Where those tankers are moored.......troop ships that had just left the harbour....bulging with young lads...and lasses....were being hit....sunk....by bombers/fighters flying overhead from the Luftwaffe. The First Aid post was set up to deal with those managing to swim back or be rescued by little tugs scouting for survivors among it all. He said the majority of lads in the FA area were there because they had 'lost it'....whilst in the queue to get on the next ship. Not many bombed soldiers were rescued...all within sight of all. It is a story that isn't told....and pictures of it were banned as it was too horrific to show back in the 50's. the pics of the situation are under the 100 year 'secret' rule. Not many made that category when 'censorship' was being applied to the horrors of WW2.

 

Not every picture tells a story....does it?x

The second pic was of us being escorted off the premises after being told 'we can't go there'....after taking pics when breaching the security for the Winter Garden/Farage election result venue!! I turned around and said calmly.....'do not tell me I cannot take a pic of where my GrandDad left these shores to go fight for us all....' He must have got my sincerity in my voice and posture....and calmed down. Good job too....he got camera shy....init!x Sheeesh.

 

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11193336_10152679712381307_8786145363092

 

Not a Political point or anything really....just a fact.....the 'meeting point' used by many UKIP staff/support crew and the like....as well as reporters....was this venue sporting proudly Northern Soul paraphernalia....just a fact!!x

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Edited by SOOTY
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Posted (edited)

Sorry WoodButcher....I didn't give all the 'detail'. It was for a week leading up to Ddays landings from round t'corner. A decoy they were. The Black Watch and Irish in the main were put through there.....canon fodder init. Supposed to be on a training run. Some things I ain't proud of being British. But then again....there is always a greater good to be had....I keep finding...X

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SOOTY
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I'll leave you with a 'unique' as opposed to a 'great' pic. It is one of the only pic that came out of UKIP Headquarters during the count!! The rest are on my FB!! I was the only 'independent' allowed down in the 'basement'. No Journalists were allowed and besides 2 security men I was the only non white in the room! Welcomed by all too....which is not so unique......enjoy!x

 

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Edited by SOOTY
Posted (edited)

Convenient that 100 year 'secret' ruling eh ... !

 

Mind you with all your 'connections' amongst the powers that be I'm sure you've had a peek at even those most deeply classified documents ...  :shades:  

 

5th Btn Black Watch landed on Juno evening of 6th and would hardly have been 'practicing' at Margate in the morning before pulling out of the Solent after lunch , and the 1st/7th Btns left these shores on the 9th from Tilbury not Margate .

Edited by WoodButcher
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