The Sunday Post (Dundee)

The lost songs: Author searches for disappeare­d birds of Britain

Artistslam­enttheloss­ofnature’schoir

- By Sally Mcdonald smcdonald@sundaypost.com

Growing up, Patrick Galbraith was captivated by lost songs, the music of birds long gone described by an elderly neighbour.

Her words stayed with him, years later sparking an epic search for 10 of Britain’s most endangered birds – more than half in his native Scotland.

The 28-year-old Londonbase­d writer’s quest began as the first Covid cases emerged in 2020 and continued between lockdowns, when the world was seeking solace in nature. It took him from Orkney and the Western Isles to England’s Norfolk Broads and finally Edinburgh.

But this was no ordinary odyssey. Alongside the ornitholog­ists, conservati­onists, traditiona­l craftspeop­le, gamekeeper­s and animal activists he spoke to, Galbraith also focused on artists, writers, musicians and poets inspired by birds and the way they inform our history and our understand­ing of the places we call home.

Speaking on the launch of his book In Search of the Last Song: Britain’s Disappeari­ng Birds And The People Trying To Save Them, Galbraith, who grew up near Moniaive in Dumfries and Galloway, recalled: “Elizabeth Engel lived down the road from me. She remembered lapwings and peewits and curlew coming crying across the fields in spring and there were so many black grouse that she told me nobody would have believed you if you’d said that one day they’d be all but gone. That inspired the book; to try to understand by travelling around and talking to people what the loss of birds really means culturally and in terms of people’s sense of place.”

Threatened birds featured include the black grouse, as well as Scotland’s hen harrier, kittiwake, corncrake, capercaill­ie and grey partridge. The book is a call to arms, a warning that if nothing changes we could lose one of our greatest sources of solace and wonder.

Galbraith – the editor of a field sports magazine – explores the factors behind their plight including climate change and changes in farming practices, the growth of large timber plantation­s, a decline in traditiona­l crafts that have helped maintain habitats, and predation.

He said: “Everybody is so keen to blame other people for the decline of a lot of these birds, gamekeeper­s, planters of commercial forestry for example but we have all had a part to play in their decline because of the way we live and how things have changed.”

The writer travelled to Orkney where kittiwake colonies have plummeted by about 90%, largely because of a decline in a primary food source, sand eels. There he found Shetland-born artist and sculptor John Cumming. Galbraith said. “The loss of birds and the loss of respect for his natural world as he knew it had a big impact on him. He remembered as a child going out fishing with his uncle who would always make notes on the colour of the sea. What he was seeing was the plankton and the way it thickened and changed the colour of the water. The sand eels eat the plankton and the kittiwakes eat the sand eels.”

Aberdeen-born poet Katrina Porteous – now based in Northumber­land – spent her life writing about fishing communitie­s, and shared with Galbraith her reflection­s on the corncrake. He said: “Something she hears again and again was that fishermen always knew it was time to paint their boats when they heard the corncrakes calling in the night and now the corncrakes to lots of places just don’t return. Their sense of time and the year and the seasons was denoted not by the calendar but by birds returning. And when those birds don’t return you have this break in the passage of time.” Once ubiquitous in Britain, only 850 calling male corncrakes were counted last year, according to Galbraith’s research, and now rely on the crofting system in Scotland’s Western Isles where numbers have plummeted by 30%.

Ending his odyssey in Edinburgh where Lord Henry Cockburn in his 1856 Scottish classic Memorials Of His Time described the call of “corn-craiks nestling happily”. Galbraith writes: “A century and a half later, when fewer than a thousand male birds return to Britain each spring, the idea that they once lived just beyond our cities is unimaginab­le.

“There are people who have become wealthy through the destructio­n of habitat and reduced the number of birds who were music and beauty for all. There is something tragic in that.”

In Search of the Last Song: Britain’s Disappeari­ng Birds And The People Trying To Save Them by Patrick Galbraith is published by William Collins.

Imagine them not here. No sparrows chattering among the creeves. No shrieking pickies, swooping down like knives, The Island stripped of its from the blackened pier. – A poem by Katrina Porteous

 ?? ?? At-risk kittiwakes take flight as a glacier calves in the Barents Sea, Norway, main, and top, a capercaill­ie, drawn by Robert Vaughan and featured in In Search of the Last Song
At-risk kittiwakes take flight as a glacier calves in the Barents Sea, Norway, main, and top, a capercaill­ie, drawn by Robert Vaughan and featured in In Search of the Last Song
 ?? ?? glitter; no raucous wake Towed by the trawler fleet; gone, like the corncrake, The cormorants swept up
glitter; no raucous wake Towed by the trawler fleet; gone, like the corncrake, The cormorants swept up
 ?? ?? Patrick Galbraith
Patrick Galbraith

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