Wednesday, May 8, 2024

2024-05

29th May 2024

I almost jumped out of my skin, when walking in Jerusalem yesterday and this old dear (with huge eyes and sharp pointed horns) appeared from behind a tree. Of course, this old dear isn’t a deer, but is a gazelle. Her husband (with rings on his horns) wasn’t nearly so friendly, and looked on from afar. I won’t repeat what I’ve written before about the gazelles in Jerusalem’s Gazelle Valley (see https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/nature-of-israel-gazelle-valley/). Today I’ll focus on how gazelles differ from deer. Gazelles are a small or medium-sized antelope that are primarily found in Asia and Africa and have horns. Deer, on the other hand, are found worldwide and the males have antlers, which they shed each year and regrow. Deer are not slow, by any means, but are not nearly as swift as gazelles, which can reach speeds in excess of 50 mph (80 kmph). The cheetah runs even faster, but a gazelle can often escape a cheetah because it can sustain its speed over a much greater distance. Here, in Israel, we’re lucky enough to see deer and gazelles, but it’s 50 or 60 years since cheetahs were last seen here – they were hunted out of existence. Maybe they’ll be reintroduced one day – if they are, I’ll ready with my camera.

While I almost jumped out of my skin, I didn’t actually. But a few weeks ago, in the Switzerland Forest near Tiberias, we came across a snakeskin – the snake had literally jumped out of its skin. Well, snakes don’t really jump, but they certainly do shed their skins – some snakes do so once a year, while others do it a few times a year. And just as deer regrow their antlers, so do snakes regrow their skin. I’m not sure what sort of snake it was, whose skin we found. We looked but couldn’t find the snake – it had shed and sped instead. 



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28th May 2024

Yesterday, Miriam and I met cousins H&A for a lovely walk at one of our favourite locations, Ramat Hanadiv, followed by lunch in the fabulous outdoor café. The weather was perfect - sunny and warm with a good breeze - the company was delightful and the food delicious. At the very next table, was an old friend, J, enjoying a light lunch. In the photo you can see J tucking into some rather nice wholemeal bread, a toast salad and a glass of juice.

J, of course, is a Eurasian jay, and like all of his kind, is particularly known for being garrulous, hence the Latin name - Garrulus glandarius. The Eurasian jay is now renowned as well, for its episodic memory. CNN’s website, a few days ago, reported on recent research that shows that jays have remarkable memories. We’ve already discussed how, in the winter, they remember where they hid acorns in the autumn. But it seems they can also recall episodes from their past in much the same way as we do.

When I saw what J was doing, I did wonder whether being caught on camera stealing food might lead to a spell of ‘bird’ in jay jail. But I guess he’s done this many times before and remembers that it’s a sure bet he won’t get into trouble.

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24th May 2024

Toy Story - Papillon

It's not every day that I'm a lifesaver, but yesterday, I was just that. I walked past a toy shop in town and noticed a rather life-like toy butterfly flying around the inside of the shop window. I stopped for a minute or so and watched it flying up and down and upside down, and from time to time it flew against the glass. A remarkable bit of engineering, I thought, until it stopped and settled for half a minute. It wasn't a toy at all, but a rather large butterfly (with wingspan of almost 4 inches, 10cm) that was frantically trying to escape its 'cage'. After a little while it resumed flying, with its wings fluttering at tremendous speed as it desperately attempted to gain freedom.  With the huge energy it was expending I was sure it couldn't last long, so I went inside and explained to the shopkeeper that she had a 'prisoner' in the window. Together we moved boxes so that we could reach the window.  By now the butterfly was totally exhausted and it was easy to catch it in a tin and release it to the outside world. Of course, I wanted to photograph it first, which I did, but my camera was in the car, so I had to use my mobile phone. The lesson from this toy story is never go out without your camera.

And what of the butterfly? It was a rather fabulous looking ‘lime butterfly’ (papilio demoleus), so-called because it likes hanging out on citrus trees, particularly limes. It's a sort of swallowtail but unlike the swallowtails we usually see, it doesn't have the swallow-like tail extensions, for which it is named. It looked so perfect - no bits of the wing missing (something that afflicts many butterflies following skirmishes with predators). This butterfly doesn't have sufficient time to be involved in fights - males live for just four days and females for seven days, making it the shortest-lived butterfly of all.


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22nd May 2024

Last week at Caesarea I stumbled across a Sardinian warbler. Why do you think it’s called a ‘Sardinian’ warbler? Could it be related to the little fish called a sardine? The ‘Sardin’ part of its name is perhaps a bit of a red herring. It was seen a few hundred years ago in a book of birds of Sardinia and got its name from there. The sardine, which has a red appearance seems to get its name from the reddish-brown gemstone sard.

Talking of herrings, the gull here, which was flying over Caesarea harbour is not a herring gull, it’s a yellow-legged gull. But it’s not fussy, it will eat herrings as well as sardines and any other small fish.

However, the hoopoe that we saw (as we frequently do) on a lawn at Caesarea, close to the sea, is not a pescetarian – it doesn’t eat fish, but will eat small reptiles and frogs, crickets, beetles, earwigs, bugs and ants – and also seeds and berries.



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15th May 2024

Birdwatchers have long been thought of as nerds, geeks or anoraks – or maybe all three. A recent study at North Carolina State University, reported in London Daily Telegraph a week or two ago, shows that actually birdwatchers are happier than most other people. There are mental and physical benefits in spending time in the countryside with a purpose – spotting and observing birds. And the benefit exceeds that gained from looking at butterflies, trees or flowers. With that in mind, Miriam and I had a very nerdy walk in the Switzerland Forest recently and spotted jays (one of them is shown here), and a woodpecker (shown here on a metal grid, protecting a tree), as well as a blackcap, chukars and parakeets.

The great black-headed gull, also known as Pallas’s gull (Ichthyaetus ichthyaetus), is one of the biggest gulls out there. It’s not such a common visitor to these parts but I was lucky enough to be out in my anorak recently and saw one flying over the Kinneret – and just in case you’re wondering, it wasn’t me flying over the Kinneret. Ichthyaetus sounds a bit itchy but is actually from the Latin words meaning fish eagle and though they’re not really eagles at all, they are certainly rather fond of fish.



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12th May 2024

Israel has a national bird, the hoopoe, a national flower, the crown anemone (kalanit in Hebrew), a national tree, the olive, and now it has a national butterfly. Last year the Israeli public selected the common blue butterfly to be its national butterfly. It wouldn’t have been my choice – I love swallowtails – but nevertheless it is a rather attractive, if somewhat small, butterfly.

It’s a sexually dimorphic butterfly; that is the male and female look quite dissimilar. The male is an iridescent blue with a white edge while the female is a less attractive browny colour. The undersides of the wings, in both male and female are grey with orange and black spots, which provides good camouflage.

The bright blue of the male gives it a distinct disadvantage – it’s easily spotted by predators. But the brighter the blue, the more attractive it is to females. So, the more attractive it is to females, the more noticeable it is to predators – a bit of catch-22 situation for the poor male butterfly. This phenomenon is known as the ‘handicap principle’, a hypothesis proposed by the Israeli biologist, Professor Amotz Zahavi. He suggests that to show its physical prowess, which makes it more attractive to a female, the male will put itself in danger, a sort of message to the female that it’s strong enough not to have to worry about predator threats. A high-risk policy indeed!

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8th May 2024

I’ve written before about how vulnerable the griffon vultures are in Israel – there are just 200 or so. And unfortunately, from time to time, some of them eat poisoned meat and die. So, it was a particular pleasure to see five of them fly over us during our recent visit to Gamla. They really are magnificent birds and quite huge too – with a wingspan of almost three meters. So much under threat are they that last year, Israel’s biggest beer producer, ran a special campaign to raise awareness of their plight. Nesher beer, one of its brands, has an image of a vulture on its label. And it’s quite fitting to do so, as nesher is the Hebrew word for vulture. Last year, the company removed the vulture from the label, leaving a blank space instead. The campaign was hugely successful, and the Government allocated several million dollars to help the vultures.



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7th May 2024

It’s been many months since we were last at Gamla in the Golan Heights. Because of the ongoing war, we haven’t ventured so close to the borders. But earlier this week, we travelled the 45-minute journey there. From the Nature Reserve, the uninterrupted view down to the Kinneret lake (some seven miles or so as the crow flies, with a drop of about five hundred and forty metres) is glorious and includes the Gamla hill itself with its old fortress. It’s called Gamla because it looks just like a camel’s hump – and camel in Hebrew is gamal and in Aramaic gamla. Here it was that the Jewish population in the year 66 held out under siege by the Romans for seven months, before being wiped out. The sides of the Gamla ridgeback are tremendously steep, and it seems incredible that semi-permanent dwellings could have clung to such precarious inclines. It makes you dizzy just to look at the ruins.

We walked across the nature reserve to the waterfall - which, with a 51-meter drop is the highest in the country. The route there took us across open land, which was still sporting some spring flowers, including the tall, purple round-headed garlic, which we haven’t seen before. The weather was perfect; warm sunshine with a strong fresh breeze, which griffon and Egyptian vultures were making good use of, to soar above us from time to time. There is a small stream to cross, in which I was hoping there might be some turtles. There weren’t any at all, but a water snake darted for cover when it saw me and two frogs were enjoying the sunshine, one on one side of the bridge, the other on the other, neither of whom were croaking to each other or anything else. Turtles we didn’t see, but on the way back to the car, there were two turtle doves. I have to say that they didn’t look like turtles in any way, which made me wonder why they’re known as turtle doves. A simple answer – their call is turtle-like – which is not to say they coo like turtles, rather their coo is like “tur-tur”. Turtle doves are summer visitors to the North and Centre of Israel. They’re such beautiful birds, but sadly their numbers are in decline, and they are classified as a threatened species. One reason for the decline is change in farming methods but another is that unfortunately birds are shot out of the sky as they pass through some countries. According to a 2001 report of the European Commission, two to four million birds are poached each year in Malta, Cyprus, France, Italy, Spain and Greece – with the Maltese being particularly bad offenders. How sad!! Turtle doves are not to be sent as gifts, as the famous song suggests. They and partridges, French hens, calling birds, geese, swans, and all other wild birds, should be left to fly freely, wherever they choose.






 

 

 

 


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