A snippet from my volunteer work on the ‘Dedicated Naturalist’ Project, helping to decipher and digitise, record and publicise the life’s work of naturalist extraordinaire, Dr Mary Gillham.
Thanks in part to the slide-perusing efforts of one of our most fervent supporters and advisory board member, Catherine Duigan of Natural Resources Wales, we have come to realise that Mary Gillham was a sucker for donkeys.

Catherine is Irish and has been blogging, on her own blog and for the Mary Gillham Archive Project website, about Mary’s adventures in Ireland, where the donkey still played a vital part in industry and transportation, especially in the more rural areas and on the Irish islands Mary visited.
In her book This Island Life: Discovering Britain’s Offshore Gems (Halsgrove, 2007, p.20), Mary writes about the use of horse- and donkey-power on Cape Clear Island, County Cork:
Most ploughing, and certainly harrowing, and lighter jobs, were dependent on horse power. Horse, donkey and mule might be teamed together to pull the heavier implements and we also encountered the less usual hinny, the sire a horse stallion and the dam a mare donkey, jennet or jenny. This is the opposite cross to the one producing a mule.
You’ll find some delightful reproductions of Mary’s donkey slides in Catherine’s blogs (here and here) but I couldn’t resist hunting out a few more. They capture a wonderful slice of local Irish life which, I imagine, has now mostly disappeared so Mary’s archival records are helping to preserve these important and thoroughly charming aspects of Irish cultural and social history.
For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our website, https://marygillhamarchiveproject.wordpress.com/ and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.
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I have ordered Mary’s book from Amazon and it should be with me in a few days. Cost 1p plus £2.80 p&p. This is supposed to be a new book as well.
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She wrote 21 books, Joyce, but I presume you mean the one I quoted here. Yes, there are still copies of some around. We’ve been hunting them down for the archive. Enjoy! 🙂
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Yes, that is the book, Annie. I will see what I think of it and then maybe look at her other publications.
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I’ll look forward to hearing what you think, Joyce. I like her writing but I may be biased! 🙂
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Lovely!! 💚
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Lovely Annie. I met a donkey in Ireland recently but it ran away before I could take a proper photograph so I clearly don’t have the Mary Gillham donkey charmer gene.
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Well, that wasn’t very nice of it, Catherine. I suspect an apple would’ve done the trick. 🙂
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