Calling seabirds from the sky

The tyres on our four-wheel-drive buggy dig into the wet ground as we climb through the tangled forests of Tāwharanui. Caked in mud, we emerge onto a clifftop and onshore winds buffet our vehicle from the swollen seas below. I grin as we lurch from side to side, excitement building in my belly. Little do … Continue reading Calling seabirds from the sky

The Big Five: Global Nature Treaties

In the run up to CMS COP 12 I thought it relevant to provide a refresher on ‘the big five’ of international nature treaties. While these treaties may not appear as glamorous as the actual ‘big five’, their continued existence is fundamental to biodiversity conservation at a global scale. The need for these treaties is … Continue reading The Big Five: Global Nature Treaties

Urban birds – city slickers or sufferers?

I recently wrote a piece, based on the findings of my Master's thesis, for the environmental e-magazine New Nature (Ed. 3) about the effects of urbanisation on breeding birds. Here I've reproduced the article, embellished with a few figures from my thesis. For those who wish to dive deeper than the popular science presented here, feel … Continue reading Urban birds – city slickers or sufferers?

An intern’s life on Sylt

Reflecting on my eight month internship on the German island of Sylt brings back a wealth of fond memories. I lived in a wonderful old house just a minute’s walk from a 42km long beach strewn with shells. In my free time I could wander for hours up and down this coast, looking for rarities … Continue reading An intern’s life on Sylt

The Wadden Sea: beneath the surface

Flat, squelching, brown mud stretches out as far as the eye can see. Intermittently, spurts of water squirt from thousands of small mounds that dot the surface. Battered banks of mussels and oysters lie scattered around, barraged by hungry gulls and oyster-catchers who leave shell graveyards in their wake. In 6 hours, this obscure scene … Continue reading The Wadden Sea: beneath the surface

Helgoland: the magic island

The word ‘Heligoland*’ sounds like a fictional place from a children’s story. It is in fact an island 46km off the German coastline, and undoubtedly one of the most unexpected highlights of my travels. For it is not only in name that Heligoland seems fictional. This 1 square kilometer piece of rock juts out of the … Continue reading Helgoland: the magic island

Cooking for 20

10 June 2014 Germany has undergone a miraculous transformation in the last months. I look back to my first blog posts about uniform and grey Berlin (albeit coated in colourful graffiti) and realise now how much of that greyness is attributable to the season. And it was true, in winter everything was grey; the idea … Continue reading Cooking for 20