

This thread is for @AngelBrise_ or anyone else who wants tips on #FrozenBubblePhotography. 👇
James Akrill - Frozen Bubble Photographer
14.8K posts

@James_Akrill
Keen Photographer. Pushing the boundaries of #FrozenBubblePhotography. Arable Farmer, Ancholme IDB Member, Gardener. Pictures are usually my own unless reposts.


This thread is for @AngelBrise_ or anyone else who wants tips on #FrozenBubblePhotography. 👇

BOOM! AR 4419 blasts another hugely eruptive X2.5 flare. Massive CME, look at the shock wave moving north! Two X-class flares in less than 8 hours. If this was Earth-directed, we'd be quite possibly looking at an incoming high end G4 storm (or perhaps more). Alas, it is Solar Cycle 25 and it's always the limb.


"UK Electricity From Fossil Fuels Drops to Record Low of Just 2%" Nice bloomberg.com/news/articles/…









If you are old enough to remember driving in Britain in the 1980s, you will remember the windscreen. You could not see through it by July. A journey from Leeds to London in August ended with a front bumper that looked like it had been through a war and a windscreen that needed a proper scrubbing with a sponge at the services. Insects on the headlights. Insects in the wing mirrors. Insects packed into the radiator grille so densely that mechanics had to fish them out. This was simply the weather of the British summer, the cost of moving through a country that was still, in living memory, full of flying things. Get in a car now. Drive the same route. Stop at the services. The windscreen is clean. The Bugs Matter survey, run by Kent Wildlife Trust and Buglife since 2004, has been measuring exactly this. Volunteers clean their numberplate, drive a journey, count the splats on a grid. Between 2004 and 2021, the UK average fell by roughly 59 per cent. England alone: 65. Kent: over 70. The 2024 update found a further 63 per cent drop on top of that. The windscreen phenomenon has the data to back it up now. And not just the insects. Between 1970 and 2024, the UK Farmland Bird Index fell by 62 per cent. Turtle doves down 99. Grey partridge down 94. Tree sparrow down 90. A generation of British children has grown up without ever hearing a turtle dove call, because there are, in functional terms, no turtle doves left to call. Defra's own bulletin lists the causes without embarrassment. Loss of mixed farming. The switch from spring to autumn sowing, which took away the winter stubble the small birds had been feeding on since the Neolithic. The grubbing up of hedgerows to make fields bigger for bigger machines. Increased fertiliser. Increased pesticide. Specifically, the pesticides. Neonicotinoids on oilseed rape. Glyphosate sprayed as a pre-harvest desiccant on wheat and barley. Chemicals applied in combinations and volumes that would have seemed psychotic to a farmer in 1950, applied to grow the crops that feed directly into the plant-based shakes marketed to people who believe they are helping the environment. The insects died in the fields where the crops were grown. The birds that used to eat the insects, starved. The windscreen, accordingly, is clean. None of this happened on the permanent pasture that cattle graze. A herb-rich meadow grazed by cattle has more pollinators, more ground-nesting birds, more beetles, more everything per hectare than the arable field next door. The South Downs and the Welsh uplands and the Cotswold commons where sheep and cattle have been grazing for a thousand years are the places British biodiversity is still, just, holding on. The countryside did not empty because of the cow. It emptied because we replaced the cow with the combine harvester, the meadow with the oilseed rape, and the hedgerow with another half-acre of monoculture that needed spraying fourteen times a season to keep it alive. When someone tells you eating a steak is destroying British wildlife, ask them what was on the field before it became the soy farm, the rape farm, the wheat farm that produced the oat milk in their fridge. It was grass. And on the grass, there were cattle. And when the cattle were there, the windscreen needed cleaning.


If I never sold another Jersey royal I wouldn’t bat an Eyelid honest to god selling them less than I can buy them for!!!!!!!!! Prime example of why the food chain is so Fucked!!!!!

Spoke today at Wiltshire Council planning hearing in support of a new Anaerobic Digestion (AD) plant. As a Wiltshire farmer, I explained how AD helps farming survive: stable local market for crops, returns digestate as fertiliser, produces green energy on British soil, and improves soil health. Yet @WiltsLibDems MP @roz_savage who calls herself an environmentalist and claims to back farming is opposing both this AD plant and a nearby solar farm. When the chips are down, she sides with NIMBYs instead of practical solutions that support farmers, food & energy security and the environment. The @LibDems always increasingly confused on rural issues.














