Biographical Details

My grandfather was born on 17th February 1891 at Sayell's Farm in Sundon, Bedfordshire. My memories of him stem from the latter part of his life, when he lived in Dunstable, where he died in 1975. He came from a Sundon family - my great-grandfather ran the village Post Office at Sayell's Farm until he died. Grandpa Frank had one brother, Harold, who died in 1923.

He married my Grandma Margaret ('Maggie') on 24th January 1917. I don't remember Grandma Margaret at all as she died when I was a baby. Shortly after marrying Maggie, my grandfather joined the Royal Engineers. He was posted to France and Belgium on the 10th March to fight on the Western Front towards the end of the First World War. He still managed to keep up his interest in natural history, collecting eggs and going on many nature rambles during his time in the Department Pas-de-Calais. We still have many of his rambling diaries complete with many pressed flowers and other memorabilia from his time as a soldier. On being de-mobbed on 11th November 1919, he returned to his home stomping ground and spent the majority of his working life at E.W. Hudson & Co Engineering Works in Luton.

Despite his career in Engineering, Grandpa Frank was an academic at heart. The notes for each clutch of eggs include a wealth of information about the plant life and moths and butterflies that he encountered while collecting. In addition to his encyclopaedic natural knowledge, he also quoted Shakespeare at will and had a fondness for Brer Rabbit! He wrote incessantly: nature notes, diaries, articles ... for himself and for others, it wasn't important. He was an extremely talented artist, his drawings accurate to the smallest detail, skills all of his grandchildren have inherited to varying degrees. I can only hope that this is some small way to commemorate those skills.

Monday, 24 March 2008

Great Tit (Parus major) - (7) - England, 1925

Hole in elder on wooded hillside. 6ft from ground.

On May 10th I found this nest and could not tell whether it had eggs or not, owing to the hole not going straight down, but as there was a small hole at the base of the nest (by which I was able to find the nest), I pulled out the nest with a piece of wire made into a hook, thinking that I could get the eggs that way, but found that the bird had not yet laid, so put the nesting materials all back into the hole, hoping that the bird would not desert. As I secured these 7 eggs a week later, the tit must have laid on the disarranged nest the following morning. I had to bore a hole into the tree with a carpenter's brace and bit to get the eggs, one of which was a little broken.

Coombes, Sundon, Bedfordshire, Chiltern Hills, May 17th.

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