It's no secret that I'm a huge fan of wildlife photography. I love wildlife sanctuaries and zoos and basically any place I can take photos of animals. With no plans this Sunday, I didn't need much persuading to pick up my camera for a nice day out.





Well, it would have been a nice day only the Scottish weather was out in full force. It was sunny, but it was also raining and blustery and a little too cold to be outdoors for so long. But I still managed some very good shots!

















We had a bit of respite by nipping indoors to see a flying show. Some of the owls are trained to be Owl Ambassadors for their species. In practice, what this means is that they fly from perch to perch for bits of chicken, and their only goal is that chicken. They are so focused on lunch and so practiced at flying that they swoop extremely low over your head. There was an awful lot of ducking/protecting my camera!





Alicanto the Magellan Horned Owl




Tehuthi the Pharaoh Eagle Owl
















One surprise resident was this handsome kookaburra! Kookaburras are actually members of the Kingfisher family so decidedly not what you'd expect to find in an Owl Centre but since St Andrews Aquarium has meerkats, I've learned to never assume what I'll see at these kind of centres!













I will absolutely have to go back to the Scottish Owl Centre when it's a bit warmer!






Here's v quick post from me, delving into the backlog of photos from the last time I was at Edinburgh Zoo. I'm pretty tempted to get myself an annual pass and start a photo series studying various species... We'll see.

It's a truth universally acknowledged that portraits look far more artistic when they're in black and white.







Travel adventures are the only kind of surprises I like. When I have a day off, there's nothing I like to hear more than a friend coming up to me and having this conversation:

"Emma, how would you like to go on an adventure?!"
"I'd love to! Where are we going?"
"It's a surprise!"

Which is exactly what happened this Sunday. Sarah, one of my (many) flatmates, informed me I was invited on a day trip to a mystery location. My instructions were to dress fairly warmly, bring a packed lunch, and not to forget my camera. By 10:30 on Tuesday morning, Sarah, Ayumi, Jack, and I had hit the road.


Unfortunately for Sarah, her chosen destination wasn't particularly difficult to identify owing to the road we had to take to get there. The A91 from Stirling goes along the Ochils and doesn't really pass through any large settlements until you reach the coast. All the road signs were pointing in the direction of St Andrews... so we were fairly confident we knew where we were going.

After an hour's leisurely drive through the countryside (and a battle with the car's stereo system), we reached the coast. Although it's just a small town, I was impressed I remembered enough of St Andrews to navigate us towards the car park by the beach. We parked up and decided to take a walk on the sand and, as the tide was out, have a look in the rockpools and scramble on the rocks themselves.

Cool kids climb on geological formations while boring their friends with how they were made - thank you, GCSE Geography
It's almost coming up to a year since I first visited the town. You can probably tell from those photos that although it was May, we had much better weather this time around. The clouds came on and off but for the most part, we were treated to the warmth of the sun. I think this trip marked the first time in around 7 months that I've worn sunglasses and was certainly one of the few times I've worn them in Scotland!


We got a beautiful view of the West Sands. Although we didn't venture up there, I still managed to get a some shot of of the beach, golf course, forest, and the rolling hills on the other side of the River Eden beyond the peninsula.


We stopped climbing on the rocks just in time to avoid getting cut off from land by the incoming tide (whoops) and as it was lunch time, wandering into the town centre seemed like a good idea. We discovered a beautiful bookshop called Toppings & Company which demonstrated an overwhelming amount of care and attention for every book on its shelves that you don't really find with bigger booksellers like Waterstones or Foyles. They seem to have a strong community with lots of readings and clubs, and were even playing classical music and offering customers tea or coffee. If I was a local, I'm sure I'd be there 24/7.

We entered Tailend, one of the top 10 chippies in the UK, and the others purchased their fish and chips to eat back by the coast. I stuck with my pasta (I've been ovo-lacto vegetarian since the new year and loving it!) and we found a bench to sit on to enjoy the sea view... which, of course, also meant meeting the beady-eyed stares of greedy seagulls after our food. We had to get a little territorial a few times!


Next up was a visit to the St Andrews Aquarium! The aquarium is only small but still houses a lot of different animals. This was hugely exciting for me because I love any opportunity to practice my wildlife photography!


After purchasing our tickets, we started out in the tropical area which was a lovely temperature change from the slight chill I had got from sitting outside to eat lunch. We saw poisonous frogs, catfish, turtles and terrapins, piranhas, dwarf alligators...


and caiman...


...pipefish and skate pods...


and so many kinds of colourful fish.


They had all the old favourites too, like clown fish...


and seahorses.


Around another corner, we discovered this rock turtle. It was so well camouflaged from the other side of its tank, we practically jumped when we first spotted it. It looked entirely prehistoric and, by resting up against the wall, just like Godzilla's nemesis, Gamera.


Outdoors, we met the aquarium's three harbour seals.


And arrived just in time for their lunch!


We had timed our visit around several of the animal talks and learned that entire harbour seal enclosure is filled with natural seawater that is pumped directly into the aquarium. In recent years, harbour seal populations have declined as much as 90% as a result of human impact, pollution, and diseases that have swept through pods.


We also stopped to give a brief hello to the Humboldt penguins who were looking just as cute as the seals.


Back inside, we discovered more reptiles, like this very handsome iguana...


...and this Burmese python.


Truthfully, the more we saw of the aquarium, the more applicable it felt to actually call it a zoo. The tipping point came when we rounded a tank containing rays and dogfish and found an enclosure for meerkats. I don't know about you but the last time I checked meerkats lived in deserts - the least aquatic biome possible.

Nevertheless, a group of meerkats live at the aquarium (which Google informs me should be referred to as a mob or a gang).


While feeding them, a keeper told us that although it is unorthodox to keep meerkats at an aquarium, it was actually down to a matter of convenience. The aquarium was trying to open an African themed exhibit but as the building sits on natural rock face, they were unable to remove a huge hunk of rock that currently sits in the enclosure.

Meanwhile, a zoo in England had three meerkats that had been kicked out of their group and needed rehoming ASAP (meerkat politics apparently gets messy). The aquarium had the enclosure ready and agreed to take them on.


Meerkats have very quick pregnancies and a year later, there were a lot of babies. I'd say we saw upwards of 15 meerkats bounding around and foraging for insects and seeds in the sand.


Exiting via the gift shop, we took another walk into town past the infamous Patrick Hamilton initials. The initials in the cobbles are placed approximately where Hamilton was burned at the stake in 1528 for spreading Lutheran ideology.

Really rather morbid to walk over. Legend has it among the students of St Andrews that it's extraordinarily bad luck to dance on the initials and that doing so will make you fail your degree.


Feeling a little peckish, we stopped at Luvian's for some wonderfully delicious (and cheap!) ice cream before walking down to the end of the street to see the ruins of St Andrews Cathedral as the sun set. Unfortunately the gates had closed so we couldn't go exploring but it was lovely to see all the same (and with blue skies as well!).


With that, we turned to walk back up to the car and wend our way home. I was shattered by the time we arrived back in Stirling and in bed by half 10! Enormous thank you to Sarah for organising such a fun and impromptu surprise trip out to St Andrews! 

I'm pretty sure most people consider turning 21 years old a huge milestone but to me, every single birthday feels momentous. I still remember being a little girl in my primary school playground looking up at the Year 6s thinking how scary it must be to be that grown up... and suddenly I'm 21? A 21 year old adult about to go into my final year of university? Are you sure???

Continuing the annual tradition of feeling generally quite uncomfortable about attention on my birthday, I opted to create as little fuss as possible on The Big Day by getting out of London. I was after somewhere with animals that would treat my SLR to some fun, but I didn't particularly want to do another zoo. As much as I love them, all the animals inside and the very supportive work they do, I also like them to be special treats and I think visiting another one for the third time in sixth months would have been pushing it a bit.

A quick scower of the web led me to the British Wildlife Centre which, I'll be frank, puzzled me. For such an official sounding name, I was surprised to never have heard of it. Furthermore, no one else I spoke to had heard of it either, so I suppose I really wasn't expecting much (how wrong I was!).

We grabbed a gorgeous pub lunch beforehand at The Blacksmith's Head which is just down the road from the centre. Really great food and a beautifully kept beer garden.  

A photo posted by Emma C Simpson (@travellingquill) on

Turning into the car park we were welcomed by this... abomination of a statue. 'Snuffles' is a 7ft hedgehog and is truly terrifying up close. Apparently a gift from UKTV, he guards the entrance to the wildlife centre.


Refusing to be put off by this monstrous creation, we paid for our tickets and went to look at some 100% British animals. First up were an assortment of rats who had an elaborate maze of an enclosure that went all around the room with overhead pipes, nest boxes, sympathetically designed 'ship-like' areas and more.


I don't care what anyone says, rats are cute. Look at those little paws and giant ears. 


They couldn't compare to the house mice though! 


Rather ominously, all the rodents were under the same hedgerow area as the foxes (different enclosures, don't worry!) Flo is an orphan fox that was rescued by the centre and although sleepy, was keeping a watchful eye on the goings on outside.


We turned the corner and found the harvest mice! 


And the rabbits. This one had squashed his way into the burrow, sulking away from the fresh food its friend was enjoying.


Although it was spitting slightly, we ventured outside. A lot of the animals have cages running above their enclosures that allow them to get higher than the visitors if they wish. This makes them feel more comfortable (i.e. more vigilant) and ensures they get enough exercise. This grey squirrel was having a great time watching everyone.


The British Wildlife Centre's pride and joy is probably the walkthrough red squirrel enclosure! Red squirrels are endangered in the UK (or at the very least not doing so great) with the only significant numbers found in Scotland and on the Isle of Wight. Their numbers began to fall after the introduction of the Grey Squirrel from North America - their larger and hungrier cousins - but also due to deforestation of their native woodland thanks to the Industrial Revolution.

Any entrances to the massive enclosure are through two sets of doors, the tops of which are slightly electrified, to prevent any kind of gymnastic escapes which could lead to the squirrels starving to death, being eaten by actual wild animals, hit by a car, or cuddled to death by members of the public for being too cute.


TOO CUTE.


All their food is kept away from the birds by putting it on raised tables and covering it in a mesh cage. The squirrels can get in through a hole in the bottom. It's like a tiny tree house!


The enclosure is also home to three or four Reeve's Muntjac deer who roam underneath the visitor boardwalk.


They're pretty cute too but I don't think anything could compete with the red squirrels.


Out the other side of the enclosure and we came to the stoats and weasels and I may have spoken too soon about the unparalleled cuteness of red squirrels because have you ever seen a weasel?!


Actually, I'll be honest. Even when weasels are right in front of you they're hard to see. And even harder to photograph. I wasted probably around 50 shots trying to get a photo of this little guy in focus and just when he had stopped moving...


Pop goes the weasel.

My persistence paid off, however. Look at that little face!


The stoat was thankfully a little better behaved.


Weasels and stoats are part of the same family as the polecats who were just opposite and were also very cute...


Just, everything was cute, okay?! The UK needs to be renamed the United Cutedom.


We were just in time for the badger talk which coincided with their feeding time.


I had never seen a badger before this day! Badgers are actually the UK's largest carnivorous animal if you can believe it. We no longer have wolves or lynxes (although there is some consideration about whether to reintroduce the lynx) and the badger is the next largest meat eater. Their diet is mostly insects and small rodents like voles and mice mixed with cereals.

They have been known to eat hedgehogs but they tend to be a last resort for food when they're truly starving. Sadly most badgers actually die from becoming road kill, along with hedgehogs, foxes and basically any other animal you can think of.


We were told how to spot setts in woodland while the two badgers dug into their lunch, giving us a splendid view of their butts.


Next up were the Scottish wildcats who absolutely refused to look at me.


We then moved around to see the pine martens. I was pretty excited to see these guys as one of them features in my all time favourite book series, His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman. They were a lot bigger than I had imagined. They're related to ferrets and I had imagined them to be around the same size but pine martens are actually somewhere between a cat and a fox.


Beyond the pine martens were the owls who were looking pretty grumpy, probably on account of the many loud children who had decided to visit them. The little owl was ready to murder.


And the snowy owl had had it up to here.


The screech owl was proving its namesake by screaming back at the children.


The eagle owl had lost the will to live.


The buzzard, although further away and not an owl, was looking just as grumpy.


The barn owl was the only one who looked vaguely content. It was quite happy to sit prettily for me and my camera unlike the rest.


No sign of the otters so after a (rainy) walk along the wetlands area, last but not least were the deer herds. The British Wildlife Centre has red deer and fallow deer that graze in a field just north of the centre and you can see them from a boardwalk that juts out into the field.


I did some snooping on the BWC blog and found out that the two male red deer are called Albus Dumbledeer and Olivandeer!

The fallow deer fawns were wisely keeping their distance from those huge antlers.


Walking back to the car park (via the gift shop, naturally), we passed the outdoor portion of the fox enclosure. This little guy was looking a little worse for wear! The centre does take in rescues so I wouldn't be surprised if this fox was in recovery.


I had a genuinely lovely time at the British Wildlife Centre! I honestly feel like I would have begged my mum to take us every weekend had I known of its existence when I was a kid. It's a perfect day trip from London and is a great excuse to get into the countryside.


British Wildlife Centre