Spring! Spring! Spring! Hooray!
The long and very cold winter here in the northern hemisphere has finally given way to Spring. The snowdrops and crocuses have already bloomed and gone and, at least here in the southern part of
If you watch your garden birds carefully as winter retreats, you see a quickening in their actions. Their plumage becomes that little bit more colourful and their song a little louder. You may even see their courtship. The blue tits in my garden are currently building a nest. Regularly visiting the nest box I pinned up a few weeks ago with beak-fulls of carefully selected grass and moss. They rarely leave each other’s side now, shooting around the garden like small twin brown and blue avian comets.
Some other birds are even further advanced in their nesting (the colonies of rook nests have been visible in leaf-less trees for some weeks already) and one of the wonders of the world-wide web is that we can now see so much of what is happening in remarkably close detail. For example, we can watch the osprey nest at Loch Garten, in
There are also a number of ‘live-streaming’
Another good place to enjoy the Spring, and indeed ospreys, is the WDCS wildlife centre in
The seasons are driven by the world climate and as we enter Spring, this time of regeneration and regrowth, I wonder what kind of weather patterns we shall see this year around the world. Will it be another year of abnormal weather patterns? For example will we see more heavy rains in the
For our latest thoughts on what climate change will mean in the seas for the whales and dolphins please see this recently published paper (click here and pan down almost to the bottom - looking for review by Simmonds and Elliot). Like the birds in the garden and the birds on the web, the great majority of the marine animals show seasonal behavioral changes, not just the vast migrations of the great whales (many of which move to polar feeding grounds to catch the Spring blooms of life there; a key-time to recharge their energy stores for the rest of the year) but there are also seasonal movements of the smaller species. Many appear more often closer to shore in the warmer months and are probably following their prey and feeding, for example, in fish spawning grounds.
So, hooray for Spring and hooray for all the seasons and let’s enjoy them and also let’s all work hard and do our part to keep them and ensure that generations yet to come will still see the nesting blue-tits, the ospreys, the goshawks and their like and also of course enjoy the good weather and flat seas of Spring and Summer that help to reveal our precious marine mammals.
Save the Seasons! Save the Climate and, of course, Save the Whales – because all these things are linked together.






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