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Recent posts
- Turbines, nightjars and forty per cent of the time
- Short fiction: Me and Heston walk all night
- Creative common: wandering on Hounslow Heath
- Early spring flowers of the Lesser Caucasus (including Georgia’s Javakheti Plateau)
- Martins and the Miocene: time warp in a Bavarian quarry
- Canute or the collective? Stemming the tide in our age of unreason
- Think of a heron, always alone
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- Bare trees, soft light and a glimpse of the coming year
- 2015: thrice the kingfisher
- Time, tree planting and commuting with birds: hymn to suburbia
- Clatter of corvids on a blustery day
- Light, camera, action
Tag Archives: Salthouse
Turbines, nightjars and forty per cent of the time
The website says that ‘the turbines are visible from the shore approximately 60% of the time, depending on the weather.’ As the seas rise due to climate heating will we see the wind farm more or less? As the weather gets wilder, will we see more clearly more often? Maybe. Metaphorically, at least. Continue reading
Posted in birds, climate change, creative non-fiction, environment, landscapes, nature writing, Norfolk
Tagged habitats, heathland birds, landscape, nightjar, North Norfolk, Salthouse, Sheringham Shoal, swifts, turbines, wind farm
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