The Oldie June 2022 issue 414

Page 79

The Reed Warbler

CARRY AKROYD

by john mcewen illustrated by carry akroyd It is now a popular refrain that the pandemic’s health and safety restrictions had an unforeseen effect: advancing contentment through a heightened awareness of nature. Taking an ‘awe walk’ is what a ‘happiness officer’ might suggest. Londoners certainly discovered the truth of Pitt the Elder’s remark, in the 18th century, that the ‘lungs of London’ are the parks. Only the ‘pandemonium’ forced me, like untold others, to explore the royal parks. And it was only a now much-missed friend who drew my attention to an unknown haunt of the reed warbler (Acrocephalus scirpaceus). Alister Warman, Director (1983-91) of the Serpentine Gallery in Kensington Gardens and last Principal (1991-2003) of the Byam Shaw School of Art, died from cancer in May 2020. He was a bird-loving walker from boyhood. His last text to me was to ask if the reed warblers had arrived from Africa to nest in the reedbed by the Serpentine Lido. In 2010, 380 yards of reedbeds were planted to fringe the Serpentine in Hyde Park and – its continuation – the Long Water in Kensington Gardens. I hastened to find out and, sure enough, as the unheeding public flooded by, there were the unmistakable trills and scratchy warbling of a reed warbler. It fleetingly revealed its well-camouflaged self before resuming its song from the safety of the thicket. A patrolling policeman joined me, hoping to spot a sand martin among the swifts, with swallows and house martins hawking for insects over the water. He told me I might also see a reed bunting and that house martins nested under the eaves of the French and Kuwaiti Embassies, flanking the Albert Gate entrance to Hyde Park. Fifty years in London and I had never noticed. After he left, a splendid cock reed bunting duly confirmed his prediction. Reedbeds bind loose soil to prevent

water erosion, absorb pollutants and provide shelter and breeding grounds for diverse plants, animals, birds and insects. Ninety per cent of them have disappeared over the last century. In 1992, the government signed the Rio Convention, committed to halting biodiversity loss. The resulting London Biodiversity Partnership, which included the Royal Parks, was part of a national Biodiversity Action Plan to enable local authorities to fulfil a requirement of the 2006 Environment and Rural Communities Act. In modified form, this continues. The reed warbler, a favourite host of

the cuckoo, has seen its numbers double since the late 1970s, to 155,000 (2016). Eastern England, particularly the Fens, has the greatest density, but Welsh expansion and new colonies in Ireland (Eire, since 1981) and Scotland (1987) have also occurred. Reedbed increase is one explanation. Alister once also flushed a woodcock in Kensington Gardens. At the Byam Shaw, he was brought another, found exhausted in the hubbub of the Holloway Road by one of his students. He released it to recover in the perfect habitat of nearby Highgate’s overgrown old cemetery. The Oldie June 2022 79


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Articles inside

Ask Virginia Ironside

4min
pages 98-100

Taking a Walk: Redgrave and Lopham Fen, Norfolk

3min
pages 86-88

Crossword

3min
pages 89-90

Overlooked Britain Wellesbourne Bath House, Warwickshire Lucinda

5min
pages 82-84

On the Road: Matthew

3min
page 85

Hotel bugbears – and

6min
pages 80-81

Bird of the Month: Reed

2min
page 79

Drink Bill Knott

4min
page 73

Golden Oldies

4min
page 68

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 69-70

Music

3min
page 67

Film: Lancaster

4min
page 64

Television

5min
page 66

Murder Before Evensong by Reverend Richard Coles

4min
pages 61-62

British Rail: A New History by Christian Wolmar

3min
pages 59-60

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 45

Back in the Day, by Melvyn

6min
pages 57-58

Happy-Go-Lucky, by David

5min
pages 55-56

Readers’ Letters

7min
pages 46-47

Postcards from the Edge

4min
page 42

Country Mouse

4min
page 41

Town Mouse

4min
page 40

Small World

3min
pages 38-39

Addicted to books

6min
pages 36-37

My illuminated manuscript

6min
pages 32-34

History

4min
page 31

Letter from America

4min
page 35

How farmers make money

4min
page 30

Media Matters

4min
pages 28-29

The return of the hat

6min
pages 26-27

The Old Un’s Notes

10min
pages 5-8

My charming heroes

4min
page 25

Cecil Day-Lewis, the forgotten

4min
pages 22-24

Paul McCartney

11min
pages 14-18

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

Watergate’s lost source

3min
pages 11-12

Hot fashion tips for oldies

4min
pages 19-21

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
page 10
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