Young Birder Mya-Rose Birdgirl Craig in her garden Photograph taken by and copyright Chris Craig
During the Easter holidays, I was contacted by a journalist, Jess Quayle, from the ‘You and Yours’ consumer programme from Radio 4. They were planning a feature about the number of people feeding birds in their gardens and how this had increased massively in recent years. They wanted me to answer a few questions on the topic and talk about how I feed my garden birds.
Young Birder Mya-Rose Birdgirl Craig in her garden Photograph taken by and copyright Chris Craig
Young Birder Mya-Rose Birdgirl Craig in her garden Photograph taken by and copyright Chris Craig
The only problem was that I was away skiing and then was going straight to Paris to spend a week with my grandmother in Disneyland.
Luckily, the programme wasn’t due to be aired for a couple of weeks, so after I was home, I got up at 7 am midweek to record the last bit of dawn chorus in our garden in the Chew Valley, south of Bristol. If I am ever up at 5 am for ringing or twitching, hearing the dawn chorus is a truly fantastic experience. I was too tired to actually talk then, so fitted the recording in at Chew Valley Lake after school. The only problem was that the Bristol Water gardeners were out cutting and strimming the grass, so I had to do my recordings in between the noise. I always learn a lot about being a presenter, every time I have to do anything like this so is a brilliant experience.
It was amazing to have my first interview for BBC Radio 4 aired last Friday 5th May 2017, which you can still hear on BBC IPlayer for the “You & Yours” programme in the section about the increase in people feeding the birds in their gardens. I am at 10:45 into the programme on http://bbc.in/2qeC28M with images at http://bbc.in/2qMuXts.
Young Birder Mya-Rose Birdgirl Craig in her garden Photograph taken by and copyright Chris Craig
Young Birder Mya-Rose Birdgirl Craig in her garden Photograph taken by and copyright Chris Craig
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
These are a few of my photographs from my 30 Days Wild last year.
30 Days Wild 2015 – Enjoying the plants in my garden but could be a park
30 Days Wild 2015 – Enjoying local woods but could be in a park
30 Days Wild 2015 – Enjoying the pond-life in my garden but could be a park
30 Days Wild 2015 – Smelling the flowers in my garden but could be in a park
30 Days Wild 2015 – Noticing a bumblebee in my garden but could be in a park
30 Days Wild 2015 – Enjoying a nature reserve but could be a place in the city
Today is the first day of 30 Days Wild 2016, an initiative of The Wildlife Trusts who state “This June, can you do something wild everyday for a month?”
What they are saying is that nature is everywhere, so by looking for it through your normal day, you should start to notice it and enjoy it.
This month is 30 Days Wild 2016, an initiative of The Wildlife Trusts who say “This June, can you do something wild each day for a month?”
They say that they don’t want you to give anything up for June, just give yourself time in the wild with your family, to reconnect with nature. 26,000 people have already signed up, but it would be great if you signed up to taking part at http://bit.ly/1WZnYKW.
This Friday, 3rd June 2016, is also the date of my conference, Race Equality in Nature. This is about getting Black Asian Minority Ethnic (BAME) people out into nature http://bit.ly/1TnYiE1
The idea for the conference came after I organised a nature camp last year, Camp Avalon, when five BAME teenagers came along. The all found it hard to engage with nature in the ways that others did and we had to find a way that made a connection. Chris Griffin who was leading a birding walk talked to the boys about Peregrine Falcons and how when they dropped to catch their prey, they travelled faster than a Formula 1 car, then comparing both speeds. The boys were mesmerised – by nature.
I could see that everyone could feel connected to nature, however unlikely by their appearance and background.
So why are there so few BAME people out in nature? Our reserves, whether they are in the countryside or in the city, have few BAME people visiting. A recent Government Report shows that BAME children are far less likely to be taken to a even park or playground. There seem to be a huge number of factors effecting BAME people and their ability to go outdoors in the UK (even compared to home countries where maybe people are working outdoors). We hope that the conference will highlight some of these and what can be done to help.
So, for my 30 Days Wild, I have decided to connect with nature each day in a different way, that could feel relevant to BAME communities and practical if you live in an inner city area. Things that they can identify with and so might find it easier to try. I have been asking for suggestions from a range of communities, so that I can hopefully be inclusive. It would be brilliant to hear from you with your ideas.<
Some of my ideas are:
Visiting an open space in a large family group, play rounders and make lots of noise
Sit in a park or garden for 10 minutes practicing mindfulness/meditation/using prayer beads
For Muslims taking part in Ramadan throughout June, break your fast in a group in a garden or open greenspace (check where’s open in the evening), followed by doing your prayers outside
Reading your religious book outside (use a bench as a prop if you need one)
Student Islamic Society on a trip out
A child with autism
Ideas on The Wildlife Trust website include “feel nature through the soles of your feet”. That sounds pretty universal and so I thought I’d start with that, though of course, most BAME people in the inner city might have to go to a park to feel the grass in their toes.
Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig – 30 days wild day 1
Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig – 30 days wild day 1
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Trying to do something wild each day – but not easy when nature has been trashed My idea is that sometimes even if we look for that great wild thing in nature, it can be hard to find because of all sorts of reasons mainly to do with humans destroying the world.
Having celebrated the nature we can find for 30 days, I wanted to highlight for 7 days the nature I couldn’t find, sort of as a warning that things aren’t just hunky-dory.
This is a summary of the problems with nature that I highlighted, with the worst first:
Day 6 – What’s wrong with super noodles? This post highlighted how our consumption of palm oil in processed foods was fueling rainforest destruction in Asia.
For those who live outside the UK, this is a popular instant noodles
Ok, so what is wrong with Supernoodles? For most teenagers, absolutely nothing!
So is it the Monosodium Glutamate? The lack of nutrients? Yes, but no.
The second ingredient after noodles is palm oil. This is a solid fat that I am sure is causing health problems. It is the environmental problems that I am really concerned about.
I feel lucky that I have travelled so widely and so it is important to me to share the knowledge I have gained and my world perspective.
At the Focus on Nature (an organisation for young conservationists – AFON) Conference in September 2014, we were asked to write our Vision for Nature. Whilst we were in Malaysia and Borneo in the summer of 2014, I was shocked at the extent of palm oil plantations. The land is deforested to plant palm oil trees, which support virtually no wildlife. At times we drove for hours, with nothing but palm oil plantations as far as we could see. In the Kinabatangan River area, there were amazing forests full of wildlife on one side of the river and palm oil on the other side, with nothing. It is a disaster happening around us right now. It’s like 500 years of woodland loss here happening in 20 years there.
Palm Oil Plantations, Sabah, Borneo Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
Palm Oil Plantations, Sabah, Borneo Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
I think that being a conservationist goes hand in hand with being an activist. Chris Packham is a great role model. He was fantastic going out to Malta and physically trying to stop the shooting, even getting arrested. Maybe that’s what we should do more of here. That’s why I like Greenpeace because they put themselves out there.
After the conference it made me wonder whether working in conservation made it difficult to be an eco-warrior. Will someone who had been arrested for hunt sabbing find it harder to get a job?
My vision for the future is that “all the palm oil plantations turn back into forest”. It is a vision that can also be extended to bringing wildlife habitats back where they have been lost all over the world. My vision is that we will not be afraid to fight for conservation and our environment.
Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig with Vision for the Future Photograph taken by and copyright Helena Craig
Day 7 – Rewilding the Mendips
The Mendip Hills are just a little way up the hill from us on the escarpment. We call them the Mendips. They are designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) including the area where we live in the Chew Valley.
I am due to start as Mendips Young Ranger in the autumn.
In the meantime, I can’t but question what is being preserved in some of the areas.
Mendips AONB Photograph taken by Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
George Monbiot has talked a lot about rewilding. Turning areas back to how they were. Not 50 years ago in the case of the Mendips but what it was like 500 years ago, when much of it was probably covered in woods, which are now mainly left on the escarpment like Compton Woods next to us.
Feral by Geoge Monbiot Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
George Monbiot shows in his book Feral how by restoring and rewilding our damaged ecosystems on land and at sea, we can bring wonder back into our lives. He sets out a new positive environmental vision in which nature is allowed to find its own way.
His manifesto on rewilding is set out in: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/may/27/my-manifesto-rewilding-world What he concludes is:
“Through rewilding – the mass restoration of ecosystems – I see an opportunity to reverse the destruction of the natural world. Researching my book Feral, I came across rewilding programmes in several parts of Europe, including some (such as trees for Life in Scotland and the Wales Wild Land Foundation) in the UK, which are beginning to show how swiftly nature responds when we stop trying to control it. Rewilding, in my view, should involve reintroducing missing animals and plants, taking down the fences, blocking the drainage ditches, and culling a few particularly invasive exotic species but otherwise standing back. It’s about abandoning the biblical doctrine of dominion which has governed our relationship with the natural world.
The only thing preventing a faster rewilding in the EU is public money. Farming is sustained on infertile land (by and large, the uplands) through taxpayers’ munificence. Without our help, almost all hill farming would cease immediately. I’m not calling for that, but I do think it’s time the farm subsidy system stopped forcing farmers to destroy wildlife. At the moment, to claim their single farm payments, farmers must prevent “the encroachment of unwanted vegetation on agricultural land”. They don’t have to produce anything: they merely have to keep the land in “agricultural condition”, which means bare.
I propose two changes to the subsidy regime. The first is to cap the amount of land for which farmers can claim money at 100 hectares (250 acres). It’s outrageous that the biggest farmers harvest millions every year from much poorer taxpayers, by dint of possessing so much land. A cap would give small farmers an advantage over large ones. The second is to remove the agricultural condition rule.
The effect of these changes would be to ensure that hill farmers with a powerful attachment to the land and its culture, language and traditions would still farm (and continue to reduce their income by keeping loss-making sheep and cattle). Absentee ranchers who are in it only for the subsidies would find that they were better off taking the money and allowing the land to rewild.”
I think this applies perfectly to the Mendips. The AONB ensures that the area is kept as it is now, barren. We need to stop grazing sheep and let a large proportion of the area rewild, with woods and moorland. This photograph shows how little nature is on much of the Mendips.
Mendips AONB Photograph taken by Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
Day 4 – A wildflower meadow cut
The wildflower meadow field behind our house was cut down in its prime. If we paid the farmer, would he leave it long and say know to the cattle that graze on it the rest of the summer?
I think this is a definite case for rewilding, letting it turn back to how it was naturally.
The field behind our house with the grass cut, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
Day 2 – A graveyard free of any nature – this post was about the graveyard in my village being ‘tidied up’ so extremely there was no nature left in it.
On the way home from school, I stopped at Compton Martin Church to have a look at some wildlife. When I went into the graveyard, at first glance it looked lovely and well kemp. Then I looked for some wildlife. I was really quite shocked at what I found.
Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
Day 3 – A dead Common Toad – this post was about trying to save our amphibians
A dead Common Toad, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by Young birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
During my 30 Days Wild, I wrote about a dead toad I had found on the road outside my house. Although it is wildlife, the issues go much deeper than that.
It is really important that we all do what we can to help frogs and toads survive. It is estimated that only 5 in every 1000 frog eggs survive to adulthood. It is a terrible statistic.
As amphibians live in the water and land, they are a good indicator of the health of both habitats. Their decline has raised concerns about habitats around the world.
All we have to do is make some changes to our gardens to encourage them back. We need to add ponds and compost heaps to create a dragon garden.
Ponds need to be in a sunny position away from overhanging trees, include a shallow area, a section at least 60 cm deep, no paving slabs around it, use water from a water butt to fill and use only native plants which are floating, submerges and marginals.
Introduce a wild rockery, a log pile and vegetation of differing heights and weights for the amphibians to come to you. Check long grass before you cut it.
Day 5 – A lost baby bird – this post was about the impact of our pet cats on nature and what can be done to reduce the numbers
Sunday lunchtime a friend of my mum Sherry got in touch. Her son Tye and his girlfriend had been looking after a House Martin chick that had fallen out of it’s nest at her house in another village in the Chew Valley.
They had some nests by their roof but nowhere they could reach. The chick had been on the patio. Nature would have allowed for this kind of thing to happen with the parent seeing the chick, picking it up and returning it to the nest. However, this is not just not possible. With the number of domestic cats around, the chick would not have stood a chance even for half an hour.
Chicks this young are unlikely to survive. Even if we can keep it alive until it fledges, what then? They are still fed by their parents after they fledge.
So that is my issue impacting wildlife for day 5 which causes big problems for all kinds of wildlife, including domestic cats. Not happy with breeding and increasing our own numbers to the extent that the earth can not support us, we keep huge numbers of predators as pets as well.
Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig feeding a rescued House Martin chick Photograph taken by and copyright Helena Craig
Day 1 – A dead Carrion Crow, killed on our electricity wires
Today I saw a dead Carrion Crow at the bottom of the field on the way home. I wondered how it had died. Had someone killed it? It looked perfect apart from damaged feathers on one side. Needless to say, I got a big stick and poked it to see what happened. The inside seemed to have been eaten by the maggots all over it. Then I looked up and noticed the electricity wire above it. Had it flown into the wires and died?
Dead Carrion Crown, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Crag
We all need to do what we can to save and promote nature by small steps like signing petitions, writing to organisations and companies and telling people about what is wrong.
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
7 Days not very Wild – Trying to do something wild each day
My idea is that sometimes even if we look for that great wild thing in nature, it can be hard to find because of all sorts of reasons mainly to do with humans destroying the world.
Having celebrated the nature we can find for 30 days, I wanted to highlight the nature I couldn’t find for 7 days, sort of as a warning that things aren’t just hunky-dory.
Day 7 – Rewilding the Mendips
The Mendip Hills are just a little way up the hill from us on the escarpment. We call them the Mendips. They are designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) including the area where we live in the Chew Valley.
I am due to start as Young Ranger in the autumn.
In the meantime, I can’t but question what is being preserved in some of the areas.
Mendips AONB Photograph taken by Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
George Monbiot has talked a lot about rewilding. Turning areas back to how they were. Not 50 years ago in the case of the Mendips but what it was like 500 years ago when much of it was probably covered in woods, which are now mainly left on the escarpment like Compton Woods next to us.
Feral by Geoge Monbiot Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
George Monbiot shows in his book Feral how by restoring and rewilding our damaged ecosystems on land and at sea, we can bring wonder back into our lives. He sets out a new positive environmental vision in which nature is allowed to find its own way. His manifesto on rewilding is set out in: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/may/27/my-manifesto-rewilding-world What he concludes is:
“Through rewilding – the mass restoration of ecosystems – I see an opportunity to reverse the destruction of the natural world. Researching my book Feral, I came across rewilding programmes in several parts of Europe, including some (such as Trees for Life in Scotland and the Wales Wild Land Foundation) in the UK, which are beginning to show how swiftly nature responds when we stop trying to control it. Rewilding, in my view, should involve reintroducing missing animals and plants, taking down the fences, blocking the drainage ditches, and culling a few particularly invasive exotic species but otherwise standing back. It’s about abandoning the biblical doctrine of dominion which has governed our relationship with the natural world. The only thing preventing a faster rewilding in the EU is public money. Farming is sustained on infertile land (by and large, the uplands) through taxpayers’ munificence. Without our help, almost all hill farming would cease immediately. I’m not calling for that, but I do think it’s time the farm subsidy system stopped forcing farmers to destroy wildlife. At the moment, to claim their single farm payments, farmers must prevent “the encroachment of unwanted vegetation on agricultural land”. They don’t have to produce anything: they merely have to keep the land in “agricultural condition”, which means bare. I propose two changes to the subsidy regime. The first is to cap the amount of land for which farmers can claim money at 100 hectares (250 acres). It’s outrageous that the biggest farmers harvest millions every year from much poorer taxpayers, by dint of possessing so much land. A cap would give small farmers an advantage over large ones. The second is to remove the agricultural condition rule. The effect of these changes would be to ensure that hill farmers with a powerful attachment to the land and its culture, language and traditions would still farm (and continue to reduce their income by keeping loss-making sheep and cattle). Absentee ranchers who are in it only for the subsidies would find that they were better off taking the money and allowing the land to rewild.”
I think this applies perfectly to the Mendips. The AONB ensures that the area is kept as it is now, barren. We need to stop grazing sheep and let a large proportion of the area rewild, with woods and moorland. These are just a few photographs showing how little nature is on much of the Mendips.
Mendips AONB Photograph taken by Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
Mendips AONB Photograph taken by Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
Mendips AONB Photograph taken by Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
7 Days not very Wild – Trying to do something wild each day My idea is that sometimes even if we look for that great wild thing in nature, it can be hard to find because of all sorts of reasons mainly to do with humans destroying the world.
Having celebrated the nature we can find for 30 days, I wanted to highlight the nature I couldn’t find for 7 days, sort of as a warning that things aren’t just hunky-dory.
Day 6 – What’s wrong with super noodles?
For those who live outside the UK, this is a popular instant noodles
Ok, so what is wrong with Supernoodles? For most teenagers, absolutely nothing!
So is it the Monosodium Glutamate? The lack of nutrients? Yes, but no.
The second ingredient after noodles is palm oil. This is a solid fat that I am sure is causing health problems. It is the environmental problems that I am really concerned about.
I feel lucky that I have travelled so widely and so it is important to me to share the knowledge I have gained and my world perspective.
At the Focus on Nature (an organisation for young conservationists – AFON) Conference in September 2014, we were asked to write our Vision for Nature. Whilst we were in Malaysia and Borneo in the summer of 2014, I was shocked at the extent of palm oil plantations. The land is deforested to plant palm oil trees, which support virtually no wildlife. At times we drove for hours, with nothing but palm oil plantations as far as we could see. In the Kinabatangan River area, there were amazing forests full of wildlife on one side of the river and palm oil on the other side, with nothing. It is a disaster happening around us right now. It’s like 500 years of woodland loss here happening in 20 years there.
Palm Oil Plantations, Sabah, Borneo Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
Palm Oil Plantations, Sabah, Borneo Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
From a global view, I feel it is more important to save an entire species from extinction (like the Madagascan Pochard) rather than spend lots of money to save a bird from no longer breeding in Britain, which is anyway on the edge of its natural range and widespread elsewhere (like maybe Golden Oriole). Often, when one “flagship” species is saved in say a rainforest, lots of other species, like insects and “ugly” animals, also benefit from the saving of a habitat. However, where there is persecution in Britain or abroad, we should do everything we can to stop the killing and send the murderers to prison. I think that being a conservationist goes hand in hand with being an activist. Chris Packham is a great role model. He was fantastic going out to Malta and physically trying to stop the shooting, even getting arrested. Maybe that’s what we should do more of here. That’s why I like Greenpeace, because they put themselves out there.
In Borneo, I met a really interesting man who had worked for WWF in Borneo for 20 years and then I suspect due to frustration, set up an NGO to save the Sumatran Rhino. He talked about how conservative the large organizations can be and how it can take many years to get decisions, because of their size, number of people involved in the process and number of interested parties. After the conference it made me wonder whether working in conservation made it difficult to be an eco-warrior. Will someone who had been arrested for hunt sabbing find it harder to get a job? My Dad used to be a hunt saboteur and it sounds cool to me.
My vision for the future is that “all the palm oil plantations turn back into forest”. It is a vision that can also be extended to bringing wildlife habitats back where they have been lost all over the world. My vision is that we will not be afraid to fight for conservation and our environment.
Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig with Vision for the Future Photograph taken by and copyright Helena Craig
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
7 Days not very Wild – Trying to do something wild each day My idea is that sometimes even if we look for that great wild thing in nature, it can be hard to find because of all sorts of reasons mainly to do with humans destroying the world.
Having celebrated the nature we can find for 30 days, I wanted to highlight the nature I couldn’t find for 7 days, sort of as a warning that things aren’t just hunky-dory.
Day 5 – A lost baby bird
Sunday lunchtime a friend of my mum Sherry got in touch. Her son Tye and his girlfriend had been looking after a House Martin chick that had fallen out of its nest at her house in another village in the Chew Valley.
They had some nests by their roof but nowhere they could reach. The chick had been on the patio. Nature would have allowed for this kind of thing to happen with the parent seeing the chick, picking it up and returning it to the nest. However, this is not just not possible. With the number of domestic cats around, the chick would not have stood a chance even for half an hour.
Chicks this young are unlikely to survive. Even if we can keep it alive until it fledges, what then? They are still fed by their parents after they fledge.
So that is my issue impacting wildlife for day 5 which causes big problems for all kinds of wildlife, including domestic cats. Not happy with breeding and increasing our own numbers to the extent that the earth can not support us, we keep huge numbers of predators as pets as well.
Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig feeding a rescued House Martin chick Photograph taken by and copyright Helena Craig
Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig making a nest for a rescued House Martin chick Photograph taken by and copyright Helena Craig
Rescued House Martin chick Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig feeding a rescued House Martin chick Photograph taken by and copyright Helena Craig
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
7 Days not very Wild – Trying to do something wild each day My idea is that sometimes even if we look for that great wild thing in nature, it can be hard to find because of all sorts of reasons mainly to do with humans destroying the world.
Having celebrated the nature we can find for 30 days, I wanted to highlight the nature I couldn’t find for 7 days, sort of as a warning that things aren’t just hunky-dory.
Day 4 – A wildflower meadow cut
The wildflower meadow field behind our house was cut down in its prime. If we paid the farmer, would he leave it long and say know to the cattle that graze on it the rest of the summer?
I think this is a definite case for rewilding, letting it turn back to how it was naturally.
The field behind our house with the grass cut, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
The field behind our house with the grass cut, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
7 Days not very Wild – Trying to do something wild each day My idea is that sometimes even if we look for that great wild thing in nature, it can be hard to find because of all sorts of reasons mainly to do with humans destroying the world.
Having celebrated the nature we can find for 30 days, I wanted to highlight the nature I couldn’t find for 7 days, sort of as a warning that things aren’t just hunky-dory.
Day 3 – A dead Common Toad
A dead Common Toad, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by Young birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Craig
During my 30 Days Wild, I wrote about a dead toad I had found in the road outside my house. Although it is wildlife, the issues go much deeper than that.
It is really important that we all do what we can to help frogs and toads survive. It is estimated that only 5 in every 1000 frog eggs survive to adulthood. It is a terrible statistic.
As amphibians live in the water and land, they are a good indicator of the health of both habitats. Their decline has raised concerns about habitats around the world.
All we have to do is make some changes to our gardens to encourage them back. We need to add ponds and compost heaps to create a dragon garden.
Ponds need to be in a sunny position away from overhanging trees, include a shallow area, a section at least 60 cm deep, no paving slabs around it, use water from a water butt to fill and use only native plants which are floating, submerges and marginals.
Introduce a wild rockery, a log pile and vegetation of differing heights and weights for the amphibians to come to you. Check long grass before you cut it.
Join the Amphibian and Reptiles Groups of the UK (ARG UK) www.arguk.org, take part in recording and maybe even a Toad on the Roads scheme, like the one at Chew Valley Lake every spring.
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Trying to do something wild each day – but not easy when nature has been trashed My idea is that sometimes even if we look for that great wild thing in nature, it can be hard to find because of all sorts of reasons mainly to do with humans destroying the world.
Having celebrated the nature we can find for 30 days, I wanted to highlight for 7 days the nature I couldn’t find, sort of as a warning that things aren’t just hunky-dory.
Day 2 – A graveyard free of any nature
On the way home from school, I stopped at Compton Martin Church to have a look at some wildlife. When I went into the graveyard, at first glance it looked lovely and well Kemp. Then I looked for some wildlife. I was really quite shocked at what I found.
Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
The entire graveyard had been cut, trimmed and strimmed to within an inch of its life. Nowhere was spared except the roses around the entrance to the church.
Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
I had expected the graveyard to look tidy in a place like Compton Martin, but not turned into a plastic-looking place, devoid of all life and wildlife. How could anything survive here?
Wasp in Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
The grass all over the graveyard had been cut VERY short. Not just around the newer stones but also around the ancient ones and in areas of just grass.
The box hedge along both sides of the path was cut to only a foot or two high and it was cut so short it did not give off any sign of life within it. Only a few strands of flowers had been spared. Beautiful and attractive to bees, it was a shame there weren’t any more.
Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
I feel like a graveyard should be tidy but that grass should be left a little longer in older parts of the graveyard and then left even longer where there are no gravestones. It should be a place of mourning combined with a place of tranquil beauty, that relatives can admire when they visit. Why can’t the graveyard have areas of longer grass with flowers sewn, a wildflower meadow? There was not a scrap of wildlife in this graveyard apart from a single wasp that I managed to find and the odd bird flying over.
I would say to those in my village who are responsible for the churchyard (Compton Martin PCC), can you think how you can try and make it fit the nature around it whilst being an appropriate place for mourning.
Wasp in Grave Yard, Compton Martin Church, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Mya-Rose Craig
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Trying to do something wild each day – but not easy when nature has been trashed My idea is that sometimes even if we look for that great wild thing in nature, it can be hard to find because of all sorts of reasons mainly to do with humans destroying the world.
Having celebrated the nature we can find for 30 days, I wanted to highlight for 7 days the nature I couldn’t find, sort of as a warning that things aren’t just hunky-dory.
Day 1 – A dead Carrion Crow
Today I saw a dead Carrion Crow at the bottom of the field on the way home. I wondered how it had died. Had someone killed it? It looked perfect apart from damaged feathers on one side. Needless to say, I got a big stick and poked it to see what happened. The inside seemed to have been eaten by the maggots all over it. Then I looked up and noticed the electricity wire above it. Had it flown into the wires and died?
Dead Carrion Crown, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Crag
Dead Carrion Crown, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Crag
Dead Carrion Crown, Compton Martin, Bristol Photograph taken by and copyright Young Birder Birdgirl Mya-Rose Crag
About The Author
Hi, I’m Dr. Mya-Rose Craig. I am a 19-year-old prominent British-Bangladeshi ornithologist, environmentalist, diversity activist as well as an author, speaker and broadcaster. At age 11 I started the popular blog Birdgirl, and at age 17 I became the youngest person to see half of the birds in the world.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.
Lyrical, poignant and insightful.’ - Margaret Atwood
This is my story; a journey defined by my love for these extraordinary creatures. Because large or small, brown, patterned or jewelled, there is something about birds that makes us, even for just moments at a time, lift our eyes away from our lives and up to the skies.