Here is a partial transcript of a blog by R B Parish on the Our
Nottinghamshire Forum on November 13th 2013
about a puffin found at Wollaton in that
county.
“In 1953 a curious
ornithological find was made on the Oxton to Southwell in
road by a Donald Brister of West Bridgford – a
puffin a bird more familiar of the cliffs and rocks around our coast, not this
rural scene. Mr. Brister named it Tussy and it became a local celebrity:
“
TUSSY THE
PUFFIN GOES VISITING. Tussy the puffin went visiting
yesterday. Five hundred children at the Musters-road infant school West Bridgford , queued
up after afternoon classes to stroke Tussy and watch
him splash about in an improvised tank. Tussy was
found last weekend, limping along the South-Oxton
road, by Mr. Donald Brister, of 18 Leahurst-gardens, West Bridgford . Mr Brister
took him home and has looked after him ever since. Mr Brister’s six-and-a-half-year-old son, Roderick, is a pupil
at the school, where the children take a keen interest in Nature studies; so
Tussy was taken along to let the children have a look
at him. Tussy lives in a box at Mr. Brister’s home, but so far has refused any food. The only
thing which took his fancy was a tropical fish in Mr. Brister’s aquarium. But the plate glass kept him out.”They often go with food for a month” Mr. Brister said “They have to lose weight so that they can
fly.” Mr Brister intends to look after the Puffin
until he can return to his natural surroundings...”
His body presented
it to the National
History Museum at Wollaton. He was stuffed by their taxidermist, Leonard Wilde
and it had remained in the collection ever since”
Later more information was provided about this anomalous
puffin:." Newspaper cuttings record that Tussy lived in a box at Mr Brister`s
home in Leahurst Gardens,
West Bridgford but that the puffin apparently
could not be induced to eat....
Mr Brister succeded in keeping
Tussy alive for two weeks before he finally succumbed.
He was then passed to Mr L.
Wilde, taxidermist at Nottingham's Natural History museum at Wollaton Hall, who
may be seen in the lower picture preparing him for display in the
museum.
Some More Nottinghamshire Puffins
Sightings of puffins
(Fratercula artica) in the county of Nottinghamshire are - not
surprisingly - few and far between. They are normally birds of the open sea,
except when breeding on cliffs or islands. Those which are encountered inland
are almost certainly 'storm-blown' birds which have been driven off
course.
In the book 'Birds of Nottinghamshire' (David & Charles 1975, edited by Austen
Dobbs, p.156) four sightings are recorded - in 1884, 1917, 1914 and
1953.
The last of these refers, of
course, to Tussy, whilst the circumstances of the first sighting (1884) are
recounted by J. Whittaker in his 'Notes on the Birds of
Nottinghamshire' published in
1907. On page 289 of this work, Whittaker writes:-
"Miss Webb, the daughter of the
Vicar of Mansfield Woodhouse, picked up one of these birds alive on the road
near the Vicarage in November 1884. This is the only county specimen I have
ever heard of: and thanks to her kindness it is in my collection."
Another puffin encounter - and
one which would appear not to be recorded in Dobbs' book - is recorded in a
letter to Tussy's founder by J. Staton, the then Secretary of the Trent Valley
Bird Watchers. Writing in October 1953, Mr Staton refers to a live puffin he
obtained "a few years back" which was "in such good condition that I was able to
send it by passenger train to my friend R.M. Lockley (the author of many books
on seabird life) on the coast of Pembrokeshire, and after.... cramming it with
fish, successful release was reported by him".
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