GreyShuck

Heathland birds continue to bounce back | BTO

13h 27m ago in nature@feddit.uk from www.bto.org

Cornwall group wants ban on flying rings blamed for seal deaths

13h 28m ago in nature@feddit.uk from www.bbc.co.uk

Golden eagle died after 'territorial combat' in the Borders

1d 13h ago in nature@feddit.uk from www.bbc.co.uk

New microplastics research examines River Thames pollution

1d 13h ago in nature@feddit.uk from www.bbc.co.uk

Upper Nene Valley Gravel Pits protection plan moves forward

2d 14h ago in nature@feddit.uk from www.bbc.co.uk

Citizen scientists aim to revive bog bush cricket in East Anglia

2d 14h ago in nature@feddit.uk from www.bbc.co.uk

Coquetdale squirrel group to install 50 CCTV cameras to save reds

2d 14h ago in nature@feddit.uk from www.bbc.co.uk

After a bit of gap, I read a couple when on holiday for a couple of weeks and am now that I am back, am starting another:

  • Domination by Alice Roberts - looking at the rise of the Christian church over the first few centuries as an extension of the Roman empire - just doing empire stuff by other means. Solidly written and well evidenced.
  • Smuggling Under Sail In The Red Sea by Henry de Montfreid - A fascinating account of the author's hash smuggling expedition in the 1920s. I would put it broadly under travel writing, since he clearly loves being away from the 'civilised' world and writes best in those sections. All the casual racism that you would expect from the era, though.
  • Bleak House by Dickens - some recent editorial about falling literacy and comprehension quoted the opening passage of the book and prompted me to pull it from the shelf. As with so many, I had Dickens forced upon me at school and my contrarian streak dominated my opinion of his writing for a long while after, but I did eventually realise that, had I been allowed to find his work myself, I would have enjoyed it. A good few decades have passed since then and I can appreciate it free of baggage now.

Made in Dagenham (2010) is a comedy/drama based on this strike.

Book series recommendation

21d 22h ago in books@lemmy.ml from lemmy.ml

Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey & Maturin series is the first that comes to mind for this feeling.

Smuggling Under Sail in the Red Sea by Henri De Monfreid at the moment. I didn't know what to expect of it, but it is really fascinating and atmospheric - as well as being as casually racist as you would expect of the 1920s.

I did today. I'm on holiday and it was very hot.

  • Got up really early and did a coast walk before it got too bad - and before too many people were around
  • Full English at a cafe
  • A bit of gaming
  • Posted some stuff to Lemmy
  • Read a few chapters
  • Watched a film

Is "AI slop" enough?

24d 22h ago in asklemmy@lemmy.ml

Noetic pollution.

'Don't swim' at 12 of 14 river bathing sites, as more locations announced

1mon 3d ago in nature@feddit.uk from www.bbc.co.uk

I certainly hope not.

CAFRE celebrates National Hedgerow Week - CAFRE

1mon 11d ago in nature@feddit.uk from www.cafre.ac.uk

If by 'long-term' you mean the spread of farming since the neolithic revolution and so on then, yes they are a feature associated with farming, which certainly has contributed to environmental degradation over the millennia.

However, unless we are going to abandon farming altogether - which simply isn't going to happen in the UK any time in the foreseeable future, and would bring a whole raft of other environmental changes - then hedgerows are a very significant habitat for the community of native species that have existed alongside farming for far longer than written records - and form major connective routes between larger areas of woodland.

Beavers were hunted to extinction around 400 years back - hedgerows had little if any impact on that.

What is this insect?

1mon 13d ago in asklemmy from slrpnk.net

Ladybird larva, or ladybug larva, depending on where you are.