In The Countryman Wild Life Book
edited by Bruce Campbell (1973) in a chapter `Swallowtails for Wicken` by Brian
Gardiner, is the following: “When one was exhausted from chasing butterflies
refreshment could be had near the entrance to the fen at the `Black Horse`, now
also gone (1). It was here that I heard tales of `enormous moths, big as birds`,
which were driven off the fen by the great fire of 1926. Like the fish that got
away, a moth grows in the telling thereof. (2)
According to an article in The
Guardian of October 24th 1972 , `Wild cat may be south of border` by
Michael Parkin:
More reports are coming in of the
wild cat from both sides of the Scottish border. Until recently it was thought
to have been extinct in England for at least a hundred years.
Mr Colin Simms, head of the Yorkshire
Museum saw what he felt sure was a true
wild cat, Felis silvestris, in North
Northumberland earlier this year. Since then he has received other
reports of well authenticated sightings farther west and on both sides of the
border.
He emphasised yesterday that no
final proof would exist of the presence of the wild cat in these areas until a
skin or skins became available for close study. He has just heard that a skin of
a cat recently killed in Northumberland is available and he hopes to examine it
soon.
Mr Simms was not prepared to attach
much weight on the evidence available to a sighting of “a wild cat” near Batley,
in the heart of the industrial West Riding. He said it was too easy to confuse a
domestic cat , running wild, with the true wild cat.
Wider public interest in natural
history is producing reports of the survival of a number of mammals previously
thought to be extinct in certain areas. Mr Simms himself showed that the fierce
pine marten, thought to have died about 100 years ago, was living and breeding
in Yorkshire .
The harvest mouse, not reported in
Yorkshire since 1881, has been identified by Mr Colin Howes, assistant keeper of
natural history at Doncaster Museum . He established its survival by
examining pellets regurgitated by an owl at Thorne Moors, near Doncaster . They contained skeletal remains of a harvest
mouse, recognised by its skull structure and dentition.
(3)
- He referred earlier
to another closed pub.
- The Countryman Wild
Life Book p. 137
- The Guardian
October 24th 1972
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