A BROWNISH streaky flutter catches the corner of your eye. It could be a scrap of dusty litter or a hank of dead grass, but you register it as a living creature because, wherever you are, these drab and drifting things, materialising in motion at the edge of your vision, have almost always turned out to be a small bird of one uncertain kind or another.
These are the ‘little brown jobs’ (LBJ) of the British avifauna—meadow pipits, house sparrows, dunnocks, skylarks, corn buntings. The term is widely used, but I’d like to ask what it is about these birds that has kept them always, as it were, to the edge of our birdwatching and that, worse still, has determined they merit only to be dumped together, as unnecessary material, in a kind of dismal taxonomic dustbin.
It’s not fair. Many other passerines could merit the title. A wren is a little brown job, yet it is so small and so brown—and has such a charismatic presence—that it has avoided the slur. Warblers of the Acrocephalus and Locustella families are also little brown jobs, skulking in reeds and sedge and looking like where they live, but, by being actively known for being tricky to see and a pain to identify, they’ve escaped any casual trashing. For a bird to be tarred and feathered as an LBJ, first it must be commonplace and noted often enough, even if not named, and, second, it must be (in appearance and lifestyle) workaday and plain.
Esta historia es de la edición September 06, 2023 de Country Life UK.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición September 06, 2023 de Country Life UK.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Give it some stick
Galloping through the imagination, competitive hobby-horsing is a gymnastic sport on the rise in Britain, discovers Sybilla Hart
Paper escapes
Steven King selects his best travel books of 2024
For love, not money
This year may have marked the end of brag-art’, bought merely to show off one’s wealth. It’s time for a return to looking for connoisseurship, beauty and taste
Mary I: more bruised than bloody
Cast as a sanguinary tyrant, our first Queen Regnant may not deserve her brutal reputation, believes Geoffrey Munn
A love supreme
Art brought together 19th-century Norwich couple Joseph and Emily Stannard, who shared a passion for painting, but their destiny would be dramatically different
Private views
One of the best ways-often the only way-to visit the finest privately owned gardens in the country is by joining an exclusive tour. Non Morris does exactly that
Shhhhhh...
THERE is great delight to be had poring over the front pages of COUNTRY LIFE each week, dreaming of what life would be like in a Scottish castle (so reasonably priced, but do bear in mind the midges) or a townhouse in London’s Eaton Square (worth a king’s ransom, but, oh dear, the traffic) or perhaps that cottage in the Cotswolds (if you don’t mind standing next to Hollywood A-listers in the queue at Daylesford). The estate agent’s particulars will give you details of acreage, proximity to schools and railway stations, but never—no, never—an indication of noise levels.
Mission impossible
Rubble and ruin were all that remained of the early-19th-century Villa Frere and its gardens, planted by the English diplomat John Hookham Frere, until a group of dedicated volunteers came to its rescue. Josephine Tyndale-Biscoe tells the story
When a perfect storm hits
Weather, wars, elections and financial uncertainty all conspired against high-end house sales this year, but there were still some spectacular deals
Give the dog a bone
Man's best friend still needs to eat like its Lupus forebears, believes Jonathan Self, when it's not guarding food, greeting us or destroying our upholstery, of course