Archive for December, 2009

Protecting Queen Victoria’s sensibilities

December 26th, 2009

When Queen Victoria was visiting the Cairngorms of Scotland, she asked her guide to translate the name of a mountain, Bod an Deamhain.  “The Devil’s Point”, he replied, in effect rechristening it, since a truer translation of the Scottish Gaelic would be “Penis of the demon”.

Queen Victoria’s travels around Britain led to other toponymic changes.  When she visited the spectacular cave in the Peak District, known locally as the Devil’s Arse due to the flatulent sounds heard there, she was informed it was called the Peak Cavern.  Over a hundred years later, the original name is officially being used again.

Photo of the Devil’s Point from www.conneryscottishwalks.co.uk

Seal pup in garden

December 24th, 2009

After last week’s fox in the London Underground, here’s another wacky one. A baby seal has turned up in a garden in  Benenden, Kent, 18 miles from the coast. The pup probably made its way up the River Rother which leads out to the English Channel, and then into a stream at the bottom of the garden. Then, according to the owner of the garden, “the seal made its way across the lawn into the pond, where it sat happily staring out of the pond in an enchanting way with its eyes just above the water.” The seal was named Rudolph by the little girl who first spotted it, who noted that “it ate some of my parents’ goldfish”.

BBC

Eagle owls and boars, not wanted in the UK

December 21st, 2009

Controversially, DEFRA have blacklisted eagle owls and boars as non-native species, leaving them unprotected and classed as unwelcome invaders.  Arguments have been put forward for both species to be accepted: boars were part of the Britain’s fauna until their extinction in the middle ages, and there are suggestions that Eagle owls also lived here in the past, although this involves going much further back in time, when Britain was still part of the European land mass.

Fox in the London Underground

December 9th, 2009

This fox was photographed in Walthamstow Central underground station late on a Saturday night.  After running down the escalators, it was shooed back up again by workers and apparently left the station quite calmly in front of surprised onlookers.  The image captures what an urban animal the fox has become.  Full story in Daily Telegraph

Peak district photography

December 2nd, 2009

I love these photos of the Peak District by wildlife and landscape photographer Geoff Simpson. Brings back memories of cool moorland walks – finished off by warm pubs. Check out his blog too (above photo).