The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

A JOURNEY OF DISCOVERY IN DEVON AND CORNWALL

Observing the fascinatin­g difference­s in the wildlife of south-west England and that of Scotland during a nature travel journey

- With Keith Broomfield

Iam currently writing a new book on a nature travel journey through Britain, and I have just returned from a wonderful trip down to Devon and Cornwall where the difference­s between the wildlife of the south-west of England and Scotland were fascinatin­g to observe.

The most striking element was that the whole cycle of life is about two or three weeks ahead of Scotland,

especially in terms of plants coming into flower and trees bursting into leaf.

Bluebells were beginning to bloom in the first week of April, as were greater stitchwort, cowslips and drifts of delicate, pink-frilled thrift on the dramatic coastal cliffs.

These clifftops were a joy to behold, ablaze with wildflower­s and indented with numerous coves and long, tendril-like estuarine creeks which cut their way

several miles inland. Creeks, such as the Helford estuary

in Cornwall, abounded with life and at low tide redshanks and greenshank­s eagerly probed the oozing mud, whilst little egrets prowled the shallows for fish.

As the estuary filled with the tide, waves of grey mullet and flounders

followed the incoming flow in search of food in the murky shallows.

Many of the species found in the south-west of England were different, too, and I was most surprised by the abundance of Cetti’s warblers

– elusive birds, which skulk in reeds and thick vegetation by ditches and lakes.

However, these little brown birds pack an almighty musical punch – and every so often let rip with the most stunning short burst of song, comprising a slow-starting “tu-rit, tu-rit”, followed by a rapid-fire “turit, tu-rit, tu-rit”.

At Slapton Ley National Nature Reserve in south Devon, it took me an hour of careful stalking before

catching my first glimpse of a Cetti’s warbler, such was its secretive behaviour.

I was ecstatic, and what is even more remarkable is that they are new colonisers to southern England, having arrived in the 1970s from France under the subtle forces of climate change.

The reedbeds at Slapton Ley also hold bitterns – brown, crypticall­y plumaged

heron-like birds – as well as reed warblers, both of which are very scarce in Scotland.

A nearby hazel-coppiced woodland supports a population of rare dormice, underlinin­g the wild riches of the area.

Whilst the narrow lanes of Devon and Cornwall were a nightmare to drive along, their deep hedgetoppe­d banks abounded with wildflower­s, nettles and brambles, which attract butterflie­s, bees and a host of other creatures.

It was immediatel­y apparent to me that these hedgebanks comprise the single most important wildlife habitat in this part of England and have crucial conservati­on value.

I also took to the water, and when snorkellin­g in the crystal-clear sea near Porthallow in Cornwall, I was mesmerised by a large spider crab making its way over the seabed below me, while crimson-coloured strawberry anemones glowed from rock crevices.

I was only at the beginning of my wildlife journey but had already become smitten by the remarkable bounty of life in this one small corner of our magical land.

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 ?? ?? A CHANGE OF SCENERY: There are subtle difference­s in wildlife and the whole cycle of life is a few weeks ahead of ours.
A CHANGE OF SCENERY: There are subtle difference­s in wildlife and the whole cycle of life is a few weeks ahead of ours.

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