THE SEA IS A DAZZLING TURQUOISE, CHISELLED rough then smooth by a stiff warm breeze blowing up the English Channel. As I sit in the long grass surrounded by flowers nodding chaotically in the gusts and eddies blowing up the cliff face, I have to admit I'm pleased with the results of my bird survey. It means the first stage of my GCSE geography project, The Avian Diversity of the White Cliffs of Dover, is complete.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Richard Taylor-Jones is a wildlife film-maker and presenter. He has a passion for UK wildlife, enjoying working on the BBC’s Springwatch, The One Show and Countryfile.
Fulmars, kittiwakes, swallows, jackdaws, kestrels – they and many more have been spotted and recorded in my small, well-worn and smudged red notebook. I’ve worked hard at this project, and enjoyed every minute.
That day was 30 years ago now and I remember it well. Sadly, I never kept the notebook to remind me of the full list of that summer’s sightings. However, standing on the very same cliffs in July 2023, there have been some additions to the local birdlife that I never would have believed possible.
In the 1980s, I wouldn’t have been able to list raven or peregrine, yet both have returned following a process of natural recolonisation. These are very special birds and a good-news story for the area. But there’s another species making a comeback that’s even more special. It has been missing for centuries and has needed a huge helping hand to find its way home. It’s the red-billed chough, or simply the chough.
The chough is a hugely symbolic bird for Kent. Legend has it that the bird’s distinctive red beak and feet came from dabbling and paddling in Archbishop Thomas Becket’s blood, following his murder in Canterbury Cathedral in 1170.
This story is from the September 2023 edition of BBC Wildlife.
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This story is from the September 2023 edition of BBC Wildlife.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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