Sign up for our Free email Newsletter
and get all the latest wildlife news!
Choose:

Wild crane reintroduction project hit by Iceland volcano

19/04/2010 18:08:50 Project to reintroduce rare birds hit by air travel chaos
April 2010. The air travel chaos across Europe has dented plans reintroduce the European crane into Somerset. The eggs are being collected in Germany as part of the Great Crane Project run jointly by RSPB, Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust and Pensthorpe Conservation Trust, with major funding from Viridor Credits Environmental Company.

Hatch at Slimbridge before release in Somerset
The original plan was to work with German conservationists to collect the eggs then bring them back courtesy of Airbus and Lufthansa to the WWT HQ at Slimbridge, in Gloucestershire. Here they are to be hatched and raised in Crane School before being released on the Somerset Levels and Moors.

Members of the Great Crane Project team set off, as planned, with a truck and all the specialist equipment required. The plan then was for WWT's top aviculturalist, Nigel Jarrett, to hop on a plane and meet the rest of the team in Germany. But after a weekend of watching and waiting for news that the air travel ban was lifting, undaunted Nigel instead arranged a hire car and set off on the 14-hour drive alone before dawn broke this morning, anxious to be in Germany in time to collect the eggs on schedule.

Nigel and the team are booked onto a Lufthansa flight to bring their special cargo of eggs back to Slimbridge, but with the continued uncertainty over air travel, it is quite likely the team will return by road and sea instead. However, it is hoped that planned second and third egg collection trips between Slimbridge and Germany later this month will continue as planned courtesy of Airbus and Lufthansa.

Epic road journey
Great Crane Project Manager Damon Bridge said: "This is quite a complex operation, so we've had to do some quick thinking to work out a way of getting the eggs back on time and ready for hatching early next week. So, instead of flying them back, it looks as though they will now set off on a rather epic road journey across Europe, then by boat to the UK and eventually WWT Slimbridge.

"Fortunately, our aviculturalists from WWT have had plenty of experience of doing this sort of thing before so, although air travel was our preferred option, the birds will be just fine on their road trip, safely held in incubators for the journey through Germany and France."

Newly built crane rearing facility
If required, the Great Crane Project team will do the journey back to the UK non-stop, taking turns driving, so that the birds get back to Gloucestershire in time to hatch in the newly-built crane-rearing area. It is expected the first will hatch towards the end of the month. From there they will be raised by specially-employed aviculturalists before a final journey down to Somerset.

Read the comments about this article and leave your own comment

To post a comment you must be logged in.
CLICK HERE TO LOG IN AND POST A COMMENT

New user? Register here

 

Click join and we will email you with your password. You can then sign on and join the discussions right away.