Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Cabragh Wetlands Trust New Logo


Here is the first public showing of the Cabragh Wetlands Trust’s new logo, which we hope will soon be a common sight in North Tipp, on t-shirts and ties, as well as on educational and publicity material, as the work of the Centre grows.

The bird in silhouette is the snipe, familiar to anyone who has ever travelled through marshy ground. It explodes into the air in a zig-zag flight, with a rasping ‘creech’ call. Its plumage is brown, with golden-buff and black stripes on the head and back and white edges to its tail. It uses that long beak to probe in the mud for worms and invertebrates, the sensitive tip helping it feel for prey. The snipe has the extraordinary ability to open the tip of its bill while the rest remains closed. During the breeding season the perched male makes a ‘chucka-chucka’ call, and in flight it will dive at a 45 degree angle, using its outer tail feathers to produce a sound like a kid goat; hence it is often called the ‘gabhairin’ ‘or littler goat.’ Hidden amidst vegetation the nest usually contains four eggs, olive-brown with dark blotches. After 20 days the young hatch and leave the nest almost immediately, able to fly after just two weeks and fully grown after seven. The snipe is the bird of the wetlands and the natural choice for our logo.

What better place to listen for a drumming gabhairin than at the Cabragh Wetlands.

No comments: