I was too slow, but I like those pink feet! #VancouverIsland #Birds #Birding #Gulls #NaturePhotography
I was too slow, but I like those pink feet! #VancouverIsland #Birds #Birding #Gulls #NaturePhotography
I was too slow, but I like those pink feet! #VancouverIsland #Birds #Birding #Gulls #NaturePhotography
all the birds were around today.
#bird #birds #BirdsOfFediverse #birdsofmastodon #corvid #corvids #crow #crows #hoodedCrow #hoodedcrows #gull #gulls #starling #starlings #Jackdaw #jackdaws #rook #rooks #magpie #pigeon #wildflowers #daffodils
Herring gull âVNFâ. Ringed as a chick on Havergate Island, Suffolk, on 27.6.14. Recorded on Guernsey, Channel Islands, in Aug 2014 then the French Atlantic coast in Feb 2015 and the following two winters. Recorded back at Havergate in April 2017, were all subsequent sightings have been recorded except for a record from Dungeness, Kent on 03.03.18. #birds #gulls #birdmigration
a very damp day brought all the birds.
#bird #birds #BirdsOfFediverse #birdsofmastodon #corvid #corvids #crow #crows #hoodedCrow #hoodedcrows #gull #gulls #starling #starlings #Jackdaw #jackdaws #rook #rooks #pigeon
cold and windy day so lots of birds popped past a few times.
#bird #birds #BirdsOfFediverse #birdsofmastodon #corvid #corvids #crow #crows #hoodedCrow #hoodedcrows #gull #gulls #starling #starlings #Jackdaw #jackdaws #magpie #pigeon
This was one of those photos in which the photographer is so focused on one thing that she didn't notice another.
Feeding frenzy. A school of something came close to shore.
an early walk before the rain got too heavy made me miss a few birds.
#bird #birds #BirdsOfFediverse #birdsofmastodon #corvid #corvids #crow #crows #hoodedCrow #hoodedcrows #gull #gulls #starling #starlings #Jackdaw #jackdaws #rook #rooks #magpie #pigeon
very damp today so short walk.
#bird #birds #BirdsOfFediverse #birdsofmastodon #corvid #corvids #crow #crows #hoodedCrow #hoodedcrows #gull #gulls #starling #starlings #Jackdaw #jackdaws #rook #rooks #magpie #pigeon
âChaos, heartbreak and toothbrushesâ: RSPCA heroes look back 30 years after the Sea Empress disaster
It was just after 10.30pm on 15 February 1996 when the call came through: a tanker had hit rocks off Pembrokeshire and was leaking oil. Within hours, the Sea Empress spill would become one of the UKâs worst environmental disasters â and the RSPCA would find itself at the centre of a rescue mission unlike anything it had faced before.
The singleâhulled tanker had torn open on its approach to the Cleddau Estuary, releasing 130,000 tonnes of crude oil into the sea. As the slick spread, thousands of seabirds were engulfed. The RSPCAâs response would stretch from Tenby to the Gower, from makeshift industrial units to lifeboats scouring the islands.
And for the staff who lived it, the memories remain vivid.
âI pulled over the van. I knew this was big.â
RSPCA Chief Inspector Richard Abbott interviewed by Sky News at St Anneâs Head in front of the Sea Empress in 1996.Richard Abbott, now an RSPCA Chief Inspector, was on duty that night.
âI recall speaking to a Brecon RCC tasker who said theyâd had a call saying a tanker had run aground at Milford Haven and was leaking 30,000 gallons of oil,â he said. âI asked them to doubleâcheck. Five minutes later they rang back and said the Coastguard had confirmed it.â
He pulled over his van on the roadside.
âI rang the Chief Inspector at home and started the response. I knew this was big.â
By the next morning, Abbott was in a room full of senior officials from across the UK â all waiting to see where the oil would land.
RSPCA Mallydams Wood Centre Supervisor releases oiled guillemots back to the wild on Pett Level beach in Hastings, East Sussex.âWe knew it was out there, but we didnât know if it was coming down the estuary. Then we saw it starting to move. Thatâs when everything changed.â
âThey turned to the RSPCA and said: can you lead this?â
Romain de Kerckhove, now Chief Inspector for Mid and West Wales, had been part of a contingency planning group the year before.
âThey turned to the RSPCA and asked if we could coordinate volunteers in the event of an oil spill â one we all hoped would never happen,â he said.
When the Sea Empress hit the rocks, that responsibility became real.
âWe started putting a plan together to send people to beaches. Then the birds started coming in. We were only just setting up the makeshift hospital at Thornton Industrial Estate.â
The press put out a call for volunteers â and the response was overwhelming.
âDozens and dozens â if not hundreds â turned up,â he said. âEveryone meant well, but if one bird was spotted, 50 people would charge down the beach trying to reach it first.â
Inspectors were each assigned a beach, armed with cardboard boxes and little else.
âThose birds we found alive were literally caked in oil and sand, in their eyes, up their nostrils and in their beaks,ââIt was chaos. But it clicked into place.â
Transit vans were emptied and repurposed as bird ambulances. Crews went out in boats. Volunteers combed beaches. And the birds kept coming.
âAt the height of it, we took in 760 birds in one day,â Abbott said.
By 5 March, the numbers were stark: 2,542 birds found dead. 3,142 rescued by the RSPCA. 757 died in care.
Most were common scoters, but guillemots, divers, gulls and swans also arrived in huge numbers.
âWe needed toothbrushes. We got 10,000.â
The public response was extraordinary.
âWe used towels, washingâup liquid, toothbrushes,â Romain said. âAfter it went on the news, carloads of donations turned up. Every day Iâd open the mail and thereâd be jiffy bags full of used toothbrushes.â
Then Procter & Gamble called.
âBefore we knew it, we had mountains of Fairy Liquid. We probably needed 200 toothbrushes â we ended up with about 10,000.â
Some volunteers washed birds. Others cleaned floors. One man from Germany chopped fish all day, every day.
âHe was amazing,â said Richard Thompson, now Wildlife Rehabilitation Team Manager at Mallydams.
Wildlife Rehabilitation Team Manager Richard Thompson catching gulls with a net in the outside pool.âSome days you just collected bodies.â
Neil Tysall, now an RSPCA Intelligence Officer, remembers the emotional toll.
âThose birds we found alive were literally caked in oil and sand â in their eyes, up their nostrils, in their beaks,â he said. âSome days it felt like you just collected bodies. Everything was covered in oil.â
His highâvis jacket âalways smelt slightly of crude oil for years to comeâ.
âWhat I would have given for my jacket to have been the worst casualty rather than all that unnecessary loss of life.â
âWe worked 14âhour days. It was exhausting â and rewarding.â
At West Hatch Wildlife Centre in Somerset, staff were working around the clock.
âWe were doing 12 to 14âhour days,â said Wildlife Supervisor Paul Oaten. âYouâd come in at 8am and stay until at least 10pm. Ten days on, one day off, then back again.â
Birds were washed in teams of two â one holding, one cleaning.
âIt was vital to get the oil off their plumage. Not just for waterproofing, but to stop them ingesting it.â
Once cleaned, birds were moved to pools to test whether they were waterproof enough to survive at sea.
âWeâd have officers on duty all night checking them,â Abbott said. âIf they couldnât get onto the little islands in the pools, theyâd drown.â
Releases were delayed by bad weather and lingering oil. Eventually, many birds were taken to Borth in north Wales to be freed.
Sea Empress Disaster Medal (RSPCA Archives)âIt was one of the most magnificent rescue operations in RSPCA history.â
RSPCA Chief Inspectorate Officer Steve Bennett said the anniversary is a moment to honour the staff and volunteers who turned âa scene of unnecessary loss of lifeâ into âa story of hope and recoveryâ.
âWhether you were patrolling beaches in the dark, coordinating chaos in the control room, or spending 14âhour shifts washing oil from delicate feathers with toothbrushes and Fairy Liquid â your commitment saved lives,â he said.
âThis operation was far too large for any one entity to handle alone. The recovery of the 3,142 birds rescued was a testament to incredible collaboration.â
He said the lessons learned in 1996 shaped the RSPCAâs modern wildlife response.
âWe are better, faster and more scientifically equipped today because of the trials we faced at Thornton Industrial Estate and our wildlife centres.â
A legacy that still matters
Largeâscale oil spills are now rare, but the RSPCA still treats hundreds of birds affected by smaller leaks each year.
Over the past five years, the charity has cared for 289 birds contaminated by oil or other pollutants.
For the staff who were there in 1996, the Sea Empress disaster remains a defining moment.
#CleddauEstuary #divers #guillemots #gulls #oilSpill #Pembrokeshire #RSPCA #seaBirds #SeaEmpress #SeaEmpressDisasterâIt was fullâon, exhausting, chaotic,â Oaten said. âBut it was also one of the most rewarding things weâve ever done.â
Laughing Gull (Leucophaeus atricilla)
#Gull #BirdsOfMastodon #ArtWithOpenSource #Darktable #CCBYSA #Bird #Birds #BirdPhotography #Gulls #Seagull #Seagulls #Animal #Animals #AnimalPhotography #Nature #NaturePhotography #Wildlife #WildlifePhotography #Photo #Photography