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Category Archives: ‘Dedicated Naturalist’ Project

‘Dedicated Naturalist’: Herb Robert

03 Friday Nov 2017

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, flowers, nature, wildflowers

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botanical drawing, Dr Mary Gillham, Geranium Robertianum, Herb Robert, Mary Gillham Archive Project, plant anatomy

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.

171103 Herb Robert (1)

As part of my current work to research and write the story of Mary’s life for the project website, I was, this week, going through items from Mary’s university days – she held a BSc in agriculture and botany from the University of Wales at Aberystwyth and a PhD from the University of Wales at Bangor. Amongst the treasures Mary had retained was a folder of botanical drawings, and I couldn’t resist choosing a few to scan for the website and also to share here.

171103 Herb Robert (2)

The paper Mary used is tissue-thin so doesn’t scan well – the details on the reverse show through – and I’ve had to clean this up a lot on photoshop. It’s still not great but I love the level of detail in these drawings and, as Herb Robert (Geranium robertianum) is still to be found blooming here and there (photographed yesterday), this seemed a good flower to feature.

171103 Herb Robert (3)

For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our blog, https://marygillhamarchiveproject.wordpress.com/  and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.

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Rambling with reptiles

03 Monday Jul 2017

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, nature, parks, reptiles, walks

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adder, British reptiles, grass snake, Mary Gillham Archive Project, Parc Slip Nature Reserve, reptile ramble, reptile refugia, slow-worm, volunteering

If you’ve been following my ‘wild’ life for a while, you’ll remember that, in August last year, I went on a reptile ramble at the Wildlife Trust of South & West Wales’s Parc Slip Nature Reserve. Well, last Wednesday our team of trusty Mary Gillham Archives Project staff and volunteers went for another ramble, partly because we enjoyed the last one so much and partly as a way of farewelling the lovely Natalie, a university student who’s been working with us since last September. Though tinged with sadness at saying goodbye to Nat, we had an exciting ramble.

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170703 Volunteers (2)

I thought perhaps the persistent drizzle might mean we wouldn’t see many reptiles but I was wrong. In fact, the reverse might actually have been true – the rain may well have encouraged the beasties to stay put under their refugia – except, that is, for one large adder, which I almost stepped on, as it was lying in the grass close to one of the shelters. So, though we didn’t see any lizards this time, we saw more adders, grass snakes and slow-worms than last year. Oh, and the bird’s-nest-shaped dried-grass vole nests under some of the refugia were really cute too.

170703 adder (1)
170703 adder (2)
170703 adder (3)
170703 grass snake
170703 slow-worm (1)
170703 slow-worm (2)
170703 Vole nest under refugia

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‘Dedicated Naturalist’: Finger-lickin’ bad!

04 Saturday Mar 2017

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, animals, nature

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archives, diseases from mice, Dr Mary Gillham, mice, mouse, mouse nest

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.

Do you know how hard it is not to lick your finger when trying to turn pages of flimsy pieces of paper? I recently spent a day at Glamorgan Archives, using their specialist photography equipment to photograph Mary’s PhD thesis – all 607 pages of it – and the only easy way to turn its wafer-thin pages was to lick my finger, much to the horror of the Archives’ staff. ‘Sorry. I know I shouldn’t,’ said I to the woman who told me off. ‘It’s not the material I’m concerned about,’ said she. ‘You could catch all kinds of germs!’

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That was not something I had particularly considered but the possibility was brought home to us in the office this week when we started indexing a box of Mary’s files, which had until recently lain forgotten in someone’s garage and has now been gifted to the project. The garage had obviously had some small furry visitors over the years and one of the boxes still contained the remains of a mouse’s nest. There were droppings, the ends of Mary’s notes had been nibbled and – the irony was not lost on us – files were strewn with shredded plastic from a bag of cat food. The contents of a packet of sterile gloves were also not as sterile as they might once have been.

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It doesn’t take much googling to realise what nasty diseases we humans can catch from mice urine and faeces, so now, miraculously, I find I am completely cured of my desire to lick my fingers!

For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our website, and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.

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‘Dedicated Naturalist’: The songs of birds

02 Monday Jan 2017

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, birds, nature

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birding, birdsong, birdwatching, British birds, Dr Mary Gillham, Mary Gillham Archive Project

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.

Mary’s notes from a walk through the Cwrt yr Ala basin, near Dinas Powys, on 7 September 1975 are so very descriptive that I fancy I can almost hear the birds she heard:

Robin ‘ticking’ at our disturbance. Another squealing like a young bird – the squeal is a late summer call. One ‘playing dipper’ on stone in stream below Cwrt yr Ala lakes.

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Wrens singing. House martins chirping. Swallows twittering. Long-tailed tits churring, blue tits scolding, woodpigeon cooing, jay screeching, magpie chattering, chaffinch chinking, bullfinch sibilant piping, pheasant barking. Chiffchaff and willow warbler, though with very different songs, have similar calls today, difficult to distinguish. Generally, as one would expect from the song, the chiffchaff has a more clipped, emphatic, less musical call, the willow warbler a softer one.

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Goldcrests alarm note, blackbirds ditto. Mistle thrushes on wires saying nothing, song thrush on road ditto. Jackdaws and crows croaking, ravens flew past with scarcely a honk. Goldfinch. Grey wagtails – 3 on lower lake and spillway, one on stream below – have a more delicate call than the pied wagtails. Moorhen cronking on lake.

170102-jackdaw

For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our website, and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.

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‘Dedicated Naturalist’: Mary Christmas from Macquarie, 2

25 Sunday Dec 2016

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, birds, nature

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Antarctic skua, Antarctica, Aub-Antarctic island, birdwatching, Christmas 1959, Dr Mary Gillham, Macquarie Island, Women in science

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. In December 1959-January 1960 Mary made history as one of the first British women to conduct scientific research in the Antarctic region, as part of the ANARE expedition to restock the Australian Antarctic base on Macquarie Island.

Christmas 1959 was certainly a Christmas with a difference – wintry enough for the northern hemisphere, yet falling in midsummer. Our big meal was eaten buffet style; the mess hut would not rise to seating a population four times the size of the normal one. Antarctic skuas attended the second sitting (something which they scarcely waited for when the domestic fowl were being fed).

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The skuas were the camp scavengers, fighting over the refuse bins and peering in hopefully through the window when the cook was at work. Occasionally one fell into the sink by mistake. It must be quite an experience suddenly to find a bird with a three foot wingspan flapping in your washing-up water!

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After the Christmas toasts and speeches, Captain Hans Christian Petersen took the part of Santa Claus and came round with a sack of gifts. Our leader, Dick Thompson, had played a similar role at the Danish celebrations on board the previous evening. The captain warned us that we might well receive a pipe or tobacco pouch. The folks in Denmark could not possibly have foreseen that there would be ladies present on this auspicious occasion.

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For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our website, and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.

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‘Dedicated Naturalist’: Mary and the penguins

21 Wednesday Dec 2016

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, nature

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Antarctic region, Dr Mary Gillham, Macquarie Island, penguins, Royal penguin, Women in Antarctica, Women in science

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.

In December 1959-January 1960 Mary made history as one of the first British women to conduct scientific research in the Antarctic region, as part of the ANARE expedition to restock the Australian Antarctic base on Macquarie Island and, when she returned to Britain following her Antipodean adventures, she was asked to give a presentation on BBC radio about her experience. The programme aired in May 1961 and this is a small snippet from the text of Mary’s talk.

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The quaintly human form of the penguin has made it a universal favourite among bird lovers. On the whole we found them friendly little people, quite ready to offer their flipper for a cordial hand-shake, as long as we were not too hearty about it. Soon after I had sat down on one occasion, a penguin came and squatted between my extended legs. After a few enquiring pecks at my boots, he tucked his head into his body feathers and promptly fell asleep.

161221-mary-gillham-and-penguin-2

For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our website, and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.

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‘Dedicated Naturalist’: The Hoiho in happier times

14 Wednesday Dec 2016

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, nature

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Dr Mary Gillham, Hoiho, Mary Gillham Archive Project, New Zealand birds, New Zealand Forest & Bird, Yellow-eyed penguin

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.

Today’s lunchtime reading was my newly arrived issue of the New Zealand Forest & Bird magazine. (I am a long-time supporter of this conservation charity; you can read more about them on their website.) Reading the depressing news that the Hoiho, the Yellow-eyed penguin, is on the verge of extinction reminded me that Mary had enjoyed many sightings of these noisy little birds (Hoiho means ‘noise shouter’ in Maori, a reference to the birds’ trumpet-like territorial call). Here’s an entry from one of Mary’s New Zealand diaries: 

Monday 14 January 1957

A very strenuous but enjoyable day today starting with sunshine and finishing with rain. Ella and I set off after breakfast on the Peninsula bus to Portobello again, setting off from there on foot … to Little Papanui Bay …

Weary though I was and in spite of time and thirst, I had to delay lunch when I spotted a yearling yellow-eyed penguin silhouetted against the skyline on a steep grassy knoll. I stalked it successfully for a close up photo (in colour, hoping to show the large pink feet and bill) but the next one I stalked from the landward side scuttled back into the sea and was away at startling speed. … I returned to Ella to dry out and eat lunch and we sat and watched penguins (only a few) on beach and water. Was delighted to see a penguin walking up the beach unsuspecting (or not?) bowled over by a wave approaching from behind, turn a complete backward somersault and be swept several dozen yards up the beach before regaining its feet.

After lunch we explored up penguin gully where the birds were nesting in a steep-sided rift filled with a strip of evergreen native bush which made a dark splash down the adjacent slopes of English pasture grasses. I spotted something and slithered down thro’ a patch of the ferocious native nettle to find a large fluffy chick standing as high as the yearling (the yellow-eyed is one of the larger penguins) and much wider due to the copious grey fluff. The flippers and white breast were feathered. After photography, in spite of the gloom, I hauled myself up the other side, hailed Ella and we proceeded on up the gully to slither down at intervals to observe more where the patches of guano guided us.

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Mary Gillham’s drawings of adult and young Hoiho

For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our website, and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.

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‘Dedicated Naturalist’: Mary on dung

06 Tuesday Dec 2016

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, animals, nature

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animal dung, animal excrement, Dr Mary Gillham, Mary Gillham Archive Project

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.

Scat, pooh, poop, droppings, guano, ordure, cow pies, cowplop, cow pat, meadow muffin, night soil, manure, excrement, faeces, muck, dung. Call it what you will, it’s part of life, and learning to recognise an animal’s excrement is a necessary skill for a good naturalist. Here are Mary’s words of wisdom on the dung of some of Britain’s mammals, with a couple of my photographs for good measure.
 161205-fox-dung

Fox
Up to 6” long; dropped at irregular intervals and sites. Always black elongated twisted with whip-like tail. Often has mucilaginous coating.
Stoat and polecat
Dark. 1½ – 2” long curved back on itself (boomerang shaped); bigger than weasels. Also an irregular black dollop on track of small mammal. Size of walnut.

161205-squirrel-dung
Squirrel
More oval pellets than those of hares or rabbits.
Field vole
½” long, cylindrical. Greener than small rodents as eat vegetation. Also get bits of chopped grass in runs.

For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our website, and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.

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‘Dedicated Naturalist’: Horace and other tuataras

30 Wednesday Nov 2016

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, nature, reptiles

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A Naturalist in New Zealand, Dr Mary Gillham, Horrible Horace, living dinosaur, Mary Gillham Archive Project, Rodger Blanshard, Sphenodon punctatus, Stephens Island, tuatara, Unique New Zealand fauna

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.

On 13 May 1957, the day I turned one, Mary Gillham wrote in her New Zealand diary:

The 13th, not perhaps the most auspicious day on which to undertake the most hazardous voyage of my stay in NZ, but it proved a perfect day.

161130-mary-gillhams-tuatara-drawing

Mary was sailing to Stephens Island through the often turbulent waters of Cook Strait to spend a week with lighthousekeeper Rodger Blanshard and family, to continue her studies into the flora and fauna of New Zealand’s many islands. On this day, too, Mary met her very first dinosaurs, though she went on to write:

Horace, the lighthouse tuatara or dinosaural lizard for which these islands are famous, was not at home but we found plenty more up to 2’ 6” long, some of which we took inside and put in the sink to photograph next day.

And the next day:

… Then back to the house for Rodger to photograph me festooned about with tuataras which had spent an uneventful night in the sink.

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So, what is a tuatara? Here’s a little of what Mary later wrote in her book A Naturalist in New Zealand:

The reptile, whose full title is Sphenodon punctatus …
Its ancestors were Triassic and Jurassic saurians which, with the exception of Sphenodon, are thought to have died out 150 million years ago … a living fossil …
Its chief claim to fame is the vestigial third eye lying in a cavity in the top of the skull. This retains both retina and lens, but the retina is no longer able to reflect an image and its nerve supply degenerates as the animal grows. …
The lighthousekeepers of the various tuatara islands I visited took a proprietary interest in their tuataras and vied with each other to produce the biggest measurements – almost as if they were fish!
… live to a ripe old age; to such a ripe age in fact, that we mortals in our transience can barely keep account of it. Anyone who marks a young tuatara is unlikely to live long enough to record its decease.
… so the Blanshard family, who were on especially good terms with “Horrible Horace” the tuatara who lived in their woodpile. Numbers of Horace’s cronies dwelt within a few yards of the house …
I was surprised to learn that the dark warts with which they were beset were actually their own private brand of tick, Aponomma sphenodonti, and that the rusty patches on their flanks were untold numbers of minute red mites. Even these ancients are subject to the law that “great fleas have little fleas …”

161130-mary-gillham-and-tuatara
161130-mary-gillhams-tuataras

Above left, a newspaper clipping of Mary and a tuatara, and, right, Mary’s photos of tuataras – and Rodger Blanshard – on Stephens Island.

For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our website, and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.

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‘Dedicated Naturalist’: Laugh with the kookaburra

26 Saturday Nov 2016

Posted by sconzani in 'Dedicated Naturalist' Project, birds, nature

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Australian birds, autograph book, Dr Mary Gillham, Explore Your Archives, Mary Gillham Archive Project

A snippet from my volunteer work on the ‘Dedicated Naturalist’: Mary Gillham Archives Project, to celebrate Explore Your Archive, a campaign co-ordinated jointly by The National Archives and the Archives and Records Association that aims ‘to showcase the unique potential of archives to excite people, bring communities together, and tell amazing stories’.

I just love this piece Mary wrote in the autograph book of Lynette A. Smith, from the small town of Lady Barron, on Flinders Island, Australia, on 18 December 1958. Not only does it show Mary’s keen observation of bird life (also apparent in her drawings), but it also offers some interesting pearls of wisdom.

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Pursue your ideals as a gannet dives for fish – straight and undeviating;
Show constancy of purpose, like a mutton bird returning yearly to the same burrow;
Seek diligently for what is worthwhile as the Cape Barren goose seeks titbits of vegetation;
Guard your morals jealously against the tempter, as the oyster-catcher guards its eggs against intruders;
Go about your business without fuss, like a storm petrel flitting through the night;
Be patient as the penguin chick waiting for mum to come home with supper;
Be decorative, like the tern which cleaves the air in soaring flight;
Be thrifty like the silver gull which leaves no fruitful possibility unexplored;
Laugh with the kookaburra, sing with the magpie and you will soar as high as the sea eagle.

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For the full story about the Mary Gillham Archive Project, check out our website, and follow our progress on Facebook and on Twitter.

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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