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News archive 2010

 

 

bug hotel
   

August 2010

The boutique bug hotel!

Avon Wildlife Trust's People and Wildlife team got down and dirty working with kids at Lawrence Weston Community Farm last week to build a five star insect hotel complete with VIP entrance and swimming pool.

Joe McSorley, the Trust's Community Action Officer, explained "The children are all in transition from primary to secondary school and are part of the Brigstowe Oasis Academy scheme to help children to meet other pupils, participate in team development tasks and gain confidence in trying new things."

Over the week Joe took the children into nature, with bushcraft sessions, insect exploration activities as well as designing and building the boutique bug hotel from recycled materials.

"We saw huge bush crickets, over 30 different kinds of moths, and 8 species of butterfly. The kids loved it, and had loads of fun building the hotel, which is be sited in an improved woodland at Lawrence Weston. We expect it to attract moths, ladybirds, lacewings, frogs and toads for starters!"

"It's been great," said one of the young architects "I've met some new friends I'll be going to school with and we saw huge crickets and moths, and were the first to go in the new woods!"

 

 

green-veined white
  green-veined white butterfly - Mike Hutchinson

July 2010

A Green White paper


Avon Wildlife Trust welcomes yesterday's announcement by Environment Secretary Caroline Spelman that she wants everyone, from birdwatchers to big business, to shape the government’s Natural Environment White Paper. Before the recent election, The Wildlife Trusts lobbied for the new Government to introduce a White Paper on Restoring Nature.

Steve Grainger, chief executive of Avon Wildlife Trust, said:
“The Wildlife Trusts believe the time is now for the Government to help society achieve its ambitions for nature by taking a look at the legislation, policies and funding mechanisms needed to restore wildlife on a landscape-scale."

Over the past 15 years, The Wildlife Trusts have been working with local people, businesses, organisations and authorities at a landscape-scale. Every Trust is working within its local communities to inspire people about the future of their area: their own Living Landscape.

Steve added
“Nature is not a luxury. With the UK facing unprecedented economic uncertainty and pressures for energy generation, food production and housing, there is a risk we overlook the very basis of our economy and our society; the natural environment upon which this all depends.”

To ensure The Wildlife Trusts’ vision for A Living Landscape can be achieved in our lifetime, the conservation organisation sets out what it believes needs to be the fundamental framework for the White Paper for Nature. It should:

  • Set out a new vision - be ambitious about the restoration and recovery of the natural environment and all the systems which underpin it
  • Protect and enlarge ‘core’ wildlife-rich areas - value and conserve existing protected places such as Local Wildlife Sites (LWS), Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs) which lie at the heart of this new era for nature conservation. They cannot be allowed to be traded in or to erode
  • Put wildlife back on the map - map out priority areas for ecological restoration. To create connections between core areas in the form of corridors and stepping stones to provide both functional and physical connectivity got wildlife across a landscape
  • Give wildlife room to manoeuvre - set out policies and incentives which allow the protection and value of areas already rich in wildlife. Expand and buffer these areas and make the wider landscape more permeable
  • Restore natural processes - such as flood protection, carbon absorption, crop pollination and water filtration, so they can operate to their full potential for people and wildlife. All are fundamental to our health, well-being and a successful economy
  • Ensure there is wildlife everywhere - inspire every community to develop local solutions to the particular challenges for restoring nature in their area
  • Inspire a new type of partnership - act together with central and local government, agencies, the private sector and voluntary bodies to inspire and enable cross-boundary co-operation. And support the voluntary sector in its delivery

For more information contact Pat Ellingham on 0117 917 7270

 

 

 

barn owl babies
  Nick Baker

July 2010

How to... go fishing for pond skaters

A new webfilm featuring Nick Baker has been uploaded to the Wildlife Watch Youtube channel. Nick shows us how to go fishing for pond skaters!

Enjoy watching online here: http://www.youtube.com/user/WildlifeWatchUK

 

 

 

 
barn owl babies
  barn owl baby

July 2010

Owl babies!

Baby barn owls at Avon Wildlife Trust's newest nature reserve, Portbury Ashlands, will be ringed by owl expert Chris Sperring this Friday.

Chris explained that ringing a barn owl baby is a highly skilled and licenced operation - it must be carried out quickly, with minimal disturbance to the birds, but it is essential as a way of monitoring the success of species on the nature reserve.  There are three nest boxes on the reserve, and Bernie D'Arcy, who was appointed as Portbury Ashlands nature reserve warden in June, is delighted that the barn owl babies will be ringed on Friday.

"I know there are at least two baby owls in one of the next boxes," she said "I can hear them - they're really noisy, making lots of excited little screeches! And I've noticed the adult barn owl hunting over the scrapes and bringing back food!"

Portbury Ashlands nature reserve adjoins the Port Marine development at Portishead. Planning consent for the Port Marine development was only granted by North Somerset Council on condition that the developers created a Nature Reserve on the adjoining land and that the Reserve should be managed by a suitably approved organisation - which was identified as Avon Wildlife Trust.

The Nature Reserve is important because it contains a variety of habitats close to the estuary foreshore, including two large pools, several ponds, rhynes (drainage channels), grazing marsh, hay meadows and hedgerows; these also support a wide range of plants and animals. 

The large pools and other areas of open water in the Reserve provide an invaluable wetland habitat for other rare species such as great crested newt, water vole and otter.  Invertebrates like the hairy dragonfly can be seen here and greater horseshoe bat can be found hunting for insects in this area. Grazing marsh is the name given to wet grassland criss-crossed by rhynes and is particularly important for many species of wetland birds including snipe and lapwing.  The three secluded hay meadows and hedgerows will benefit from improved management, resulting in an increase in insect life and providing food and shelter for many small mammals, which in turn provide a meal for birds of prey including buzzards and owls.

Further information from Bernie D'arcy, Portbury Ashlands Nature Reserve Warden on  01275 817710  or Pat Ellingham on 0117 917 7270

Click here for information on visiting this nature reserve

 
WildBus
  get closer to nature on the WildBus
 
WildBus logo

July 2010

Pioneering podcast offers bus users wildlife insights

Avon Wildlife Trust (AWT) is creating a new way for urban people to get closer to nature by launching Britain’s first free-to-download podcast introducing bus passengers to the nature points of interest along their route.

The first AWT WildBus podcast  - based on First Bristol’s Service 40 bus route, which operates between Old Market in Bristol and Cribbs Causeway - becomes available from Monday 12 July.

It has been produced by Julie Doherty, the Trust’s learning development officer, using  the voices, stories and observations of Trust members, local residents and expert naturalists including broadcaster Simon King, who shares his boyhood memories of wildlife-watching in Blaise woods.

Julie Doherty explains: “Buses are a great vantage point for viewing nature as well as an environmentally-friendly way to visit nature sites.  Our hope, then, is that the podcast will not only give bus passengers pointers on what to watch out for as they travel but will also show how very easy it is to reach wildlife-rich places even from the heart of a city.”

To mark the launch, First has run a special WildBus service from The Centre to Sea Mills on Monday 12 July (11.30am) during which the podcast was played out over speakers.

Julie says: “The reason for starting with the number 40 route is that it passes such an interesting range of different wildlife habitats, starting amid the tall towers in the centre where seagulls perch, then dipping in and out of built-up zones and open space as it crosses The Downs, to Sneyd Park, Sea Mills, Shirehampton, Lawrence Weston, and Henbury before reaching the shops at Cribbs Causeway.
Among the insights offered by the soundtrack are where to look for otters, find unusual plants such as the itchy 'beggarticks' or skullcap or smell wild thyme, when to expect  chiff chaffs on Brandon Hill and why pigeons are goodTalking about the podcast, Tony McNiff, Managing Director of First Bristol, Somerset and Avon says: “We want to congratulate Avon Wildlife Trust for coming up with this innovative and imaginative way to combine new technology with the great viewing opportunities presented by bus windows to create a travelling nature observatory. We are sure that the podcast will add pleasure and interest to Service 40 journeys and we hope it may also encourage new people to try bus travel as an environmentally friendly means of getting around the city. Customers wanting to make the most of the podcast would be well advised to get one of our many multi journey tickets, which will allow them to hop on and off the bus as often as they wish to, exploring the many wildlife locations they’ll pass en route.”

The launch of Avon Wildlife Trust’s WildBus podcast is part of a package of events and activities celebrating the charity’s 30th birthday this year and is the latest in a long line of pioneering people and wildlife projects which have helped to make AWT a UK authority on wildlife conservation in an urban setting.

Wildbus podcast

Go here to find out more and download the podcast

 

 
Mark
  Mark

June 2010

Last chance to see Vice-President for Avon Wildlife Trust

Avon Wildlife Trust is delighted to announce that award-winning writer and TV presenter Mark Carwardine has agreed to become a Vice President of the Trust.

Mark co-presented the six-part BBC2 television series Last Chance to See, with Stephen Fry, in which the unlikely duo travelled the world in search of endangered species (following in the footsteps of a similar journey Mark made with Douglas Adams 20 years before). He gave a sell-out fundraising talk on the series for the Trust early this year, where he spoke in his introduction of his commitment to local wildlife. On accepting the Trust's invitation Mark said

"I am truly delighted to become a Vice President of Avon Wildlife Trust. Though I spend much of my time travelling and working on wildlife conservation issues in other countries, I care passionately about nature in my home area. The Trust is a key player in safeguarding the integrity of natural areas in the region, and I intend to support it in every way I can."

Mark has just come back from photographing critically endangered Sumatran rhinos and is about to go to Kenya and Swaziland to film 'Last Chance to See: Rhino Rescue', a one-off with Stephen Fry about northern white rhinos. This goes out on BBC2 later in the year and the Trust very much hopes that Mark will give a talk about the making of this film at the same time!.

Mark Carwardine is a zoologist, an active and outspoken conservationist, an award-winning writer, a TV and radio presenter, a widely published wildlife photographer, a magazine columnist and a conservation consultant.

He has written more than 50 books (including several bestsellers) and hundreds of newspaper and magazine articles, and has been writing a provocative monthly column in BBC Wildlife magazine since January 2004.

Mark has been Chairman of the Judging Panel of the prestigious Wildlife Photographer of the Year Competition, jointly owned by BBC Wildlife magazine and the Natural History Museum, since 2005. His own extensive collection of wildlife and conservation photographs, taken in more than 100 countries, is sold through picture agencies around the world.

 

 

 
Royal visit for Folly Farm
   

May 2010

Royal visit for Folly Farm

 

HRH The Duke of Kent visited the Folly Farm Environmental Centre on Tuesday 25 May 2010, where he was greeted by Philippa Forrester, Vice-President of Avon Wildlife Trust  (whose TV series Halcyon Diaries is currently enjoying great success). The Duke of Kent toured the Folly Farm Centre and observed the schools programme with children from Winford Primary School, before planting an oak tree to commemorate the Trust's 30th anniversary.

 

 

 

 
Simon at Folly Farm
  Simon at Folly Farm

April 2010

Simon King goes wild for our 30th birthday!

Simon came to Folly Farm on 3 May to wish the Trust a happy birthday - over 300 members came for a fun-filled afternoon of music, walks and cream teas at the Trust's Folly Farm Centre. Simon said "I applaud Avon Wildlfie Trust's plans for the future and the work it has done over the past 30 years to care for the wild creatures and wild places of the region!"

 

 

April 2010

Vote for wildlife!

When it comes to general elections, wildlife issues rarely feature in the priorities of our politicians. Yet we know that the conservation and enhancement of our local wildlife is a high priority for people in the Avon area. Furthermore, when things get tough, environmental and wildlife issues – underfunded at the best of times – are the first to get cut.

We now face the very real prospect of our hard work to bring wildlife issues higher up the agenda of decision makers being reversed, so we are working even harder for wildlife as the General Election approaches.

 
meadow
  wildlfower meadow - David Kilbey
  marine life
  urchins and brittlestars - Paul Naylor
  Severn Estuary
  Severn Estuary

On land

Nationally, The Wildlife Trusts have led the way in instigating Living Landscape projects to restore lost and degraded habitats; to connect them up to make them more robust in the face of climate change and to ensure that they bring with them social and economic benefits as well as gains for wildlife. But will the focus on getting the economy out of recession see diminishing resources channelled to innovative projects such as these?

On sea

Similarly, in 2009 The Wildlife Trusts welcomed and celebrated the long fought for Marine Act which gives much needed protection to the marine environment. But will the resources to carry forward the provisions of the Act dry up leaving the plight of our marine wildlife once again out of sight and out of mind?

The Severn Estuary

The Wildlife Trusts’ report - Energy at any price? (PDF) highlights the vital importance of the Severn Estuary. Not just for wildlife but people too. The Wildlife Trusts say damming the Estuary with an old-fashioned barrage would have a devastating impact. Instead, the next Government should commit to investigating a range of modern, low-impact technologies.

Our plans

Ahead of the 2010 general election, Avon Wildlife Trust has written to all our local prospective parliamentary candidates to ask them three questions:

If elected, what will you do to help the natural environment of this area?

How will your Party put nature at the heart of the way we use and manage our land?

What is your party’s policy towards harnessing the tidal power of the Severn Estuary with an environmentally damaging barrage?

We have invited all candidates to respond to these questions in no more than 200 words per question. Responses will be published here in order of receipt.

Read the MPs' replies here:

Peter Tyzack
Liberal Democrats
Filton & Bradley Stoke

Liam Fox
Conservative
Woodspring

Dr. Brian Mathew
Liberal Democrats
North Somerset

Now we need your help

Now we need your help - and prospective candidates need your vote.

When they come knocking on your front door, we need you to ask them how much they value our local wildlife and what they will do to help the natural environment of this area?

We would love to know if you do manage to talk to your local candidates and learn what their responses are, so please drop us an email.

 

 
bee orchid
  bee orchid

30th March, 2010

A pledge for wildlife!

 

 

Conservationists are urging the public to help stop further wildlife loss by encouraging their local MPs and Prospective Parliamentary Candidates to sign a new ‘wildlife pledge”, to do all they can to stop and reverse wildlife decline.

A consortium of 11 wildlife charities, including The Wildlife Trusts, have pulled together the pledge to help reverse the rapid decline in our wildlife - both species and habitats. It was recently reported that around 500 species have become extinct in England in the recent past and conservationists are appealing to the public to help make wildlife a top priority for politicians and stop further species being lost.

The Wildlife Pledge, which can be viewed online at www.wildlifepledges2010.org.uk is supported by wildlife organisations representing more than two million people. It includes the promise to take action in tackling climate change and to help wildlife meet this challenge. It also looks for commitment from politicians to help reverse the decline of farmland wildlife by the effective promotion of nature-friendly farming, as well as to provide children with contact with the natural world as part of their education.
The pledge gives Prospective Parliamentary Candidates the opportunity to express their support and commitment to various aspects of wildlife conservation. The public can view which candidates have given their support for this issue before the election. Conservationists are encouraging people to then contact their Prospective Parliamentary Candidates informing them how important this issue is and that their response to the pledge may affect the way they vote.

Stephanie Hilborne, chief executive of The Wildlife Trusts, said:
“The actions of the next government are absolutely crucial to ensuring a future for our wildlife. One of the many challenges they will face will be to implement the Marine Act to restore our seas and also to restore the natural environment on land. It is vital that we have MPs in the new parliament who understand and appreciate these challenges and keep the next government on its toes.”

To find out if your local candidates have signed the pledge, visit www.wildlifepledges2010.org.uk

Story by RSWT

More Information
The consortium of 11 organisations involved with the Wildlife Pledge is as follows: Amphibian and Reptile Conservation, Bat Conservation Trust, Buglife, Butterfly Conservation, The Grasslands Trust, Mammals Trust, Plantlife, RSPB, Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust, The Wildlife Trusts and the Woodland Trust.

 

 
severn estuary
  Severn Estuary

March 2010
Energy at any price? New Severn Barrage Report launched

Avon Wildlife Trust representative Lucy Rogers was at the House of Lords on 2 March to help launch a special report on the future of the Severn Estuary.

The Wildlife Trusts’ report - Energy at any price? highlights the vital importance of the Severn Estuary.  Not just for wildlife but people too.  As the Government considers different proposals for harnessing the immense natural tidal power to create electricity, The Wildlife Trusts say damming the Estuary with an old-fashioned barrage would have a devastating impact. Instead, the Government should commit to investigating a range of modern, low-impact technologies.

The Wildlife Trusts believe three innovative options* hold the most promise.  The decision should be taken on the basis of causing least environmental damage and being most cost-effective.  The Wildlife Trusts want to ensure the chosen option will not be something society regrets in decades to come. 

The Severn Estuary provides a haven for the young of commercial fish stocks. It provides a means of transport and trade. It is the site of many recreational pursuits and, by its very nature, brings enjoyment to people of all ages.  And the importance of the Estuary for wildlife is recognised through UK, European and International law because of its internationally-important species and extensive habitat areas. By building a barrage, the Government would be reneging on its commitments to protect this wildlife to the highest levels.

Lucy Rogers, Director of Conservation Programmes for Avon Wildlife Trust said:  “It is no exaggeration to say the Severn Estuary is an irreplaceable part of the UK’s natural heritage. 

“It is a dynamic system which affects all our lives.  We want to remind people about what the Severn Estuary means; it is part of our cultural heritage and it also very much part of today too; people rely on it for their livelihoods. We are mobilising our members to take action.

“We cannot view our energy needs in isolation from our environment.  Altering the Severn’s intertidal habitat is so risky.  We have a moral and ethical obligation to ensure the best options for the natural environment are pursued.  We should not consider out-dated technology which could impact on the Estuary on an unprecedented scale.

“Destroying the Severn Estuary – arguably the eighth natural wonder of the world – would be a deadly sin. We need your support to protect this unique place – join us and become a ‘Severn Bore’!”   

Further information

Contact Lucy Rogers 0117 917 7270          

Download the report (PDF)

See it on the YouTube Wildlife Trust Channel

Join Avon Wildlife Trust and become a ‘Severn Bore’:

  1. Write to your MP - Express your concerns about taking the right decision, for the Estuary and people.  Visit www.theyworkforyou.com
  2. Join our campaign – Keep an eye on www.wildlifetrusts.org for news, developments and specific details of how to help
  3. Enjoy the Estuary – And visit local nature reserves in the area. Visit our Severn Estuary page to download our Severn Wanders guide

 

 

March 2010

 
Earth hour on Brandon Hill
  Earth hour on Brandon Hill - Dave Lewis

Keep it dark!

 

Avon Wildlife Trust is encouraging its members to stay in the dark this Saturday 27 March 2010, to support WWF’s Earth Hour when households, businesses and landmarks in more than 100 countries will turn off their lights to show support for action on climate change.

The global initiative has become bigger than ever, surpassing all previous years’ events.  From Australia to America and Europe to Asia on Saturday 27 March 2010 at 8.30pm, over 1,100 cities and towns across the globe will switch off their lights for one hour to show they care about climate change.

"This years Earth Hour hopes to attract some one billion people”, said Steve Micklewright, Director of Community Programmes at Avon Wildlife Trust. “By signing up to switch off their lights, individuals, businesses, towns and cities can join a global phenomenon and show world leaders that we care about climate change.”

Last year 88 countries got involved in the initiative and with 2010 seeing more than 100 countries taking part, a ripple will cross the Earth as landmarks in 25 time zones switch off.  Many of the world’s most iconic landmarks are on board including the Golden Gate Bridge, the Las Vegas strip, Table Mountain and the Burj Khalifa tower- the tallest building in the world.

UK landmarks pledging to switch off their lights include Piccadilly Circus and the London Eye, which will be dimming its lights for Earth Hour.  Other famous buildings pledging to plunge into darkness for an hour include the Royal Albert Hall, Manchester’s Trafford Centre, Stormont, Inverness Castle, Wales Millennium Stadium and Portsmouth’s Spinnaker Tower.  Companies supporting the event include M&S, Coca-Cola and Ikea.

Countries and regions involved for the first time include the remote island nation of Madagascar, Nepal, Saudi Arabia, Mongolia, Cambodia, Czech Republic, Paraguay, Ecuador and the US Commonwealth of the Northern Marina Islands in the Pacific Ocean.

For further information or to sign up to WWF’s Earth Hour please visit: www.wwf.org.uk/earthhour

 

  House Sparrow Project launch
  House Sparrow Project launch in Victoria Park

Missing - the house sparrow!

Keep an eye out for a different kind of courting couple this Valentine’s season as the Trust launches an investigation into why one of the West’s best-loved garden birds – the house sparrow - is disappearing.

Trust spokesman Steve Micklewright explains: "The cheeky, chirpy house sparrow used to be one of our commonest birds, but numbers have dwindled so much they are now a species of conservation concern. We are keen to find out why numbers are dropping and where they are hanging out - but we need the public’s help. So, as St Valentine’s Day approaches, we’re asking everyone to take part in the online survey we’re running at www.wildsparrows.org.uk and let us know about any house sparrows they see.”

The project is launching at Valentine’s time because, traditionally, this is when bachelor male house sparrows start trying to charm females into becoming their life-long mate.

Steve explains: "There’s nothing softly-softly about house sparrow courtship. Males get straight to the point by choosing a perfect love nest then chirping loudly to advertise their find to passing females. To get the Wild Sparrows project going, we want to gather in reports of this type of behaviour to give us a sense of how many pairs are breeding in this area.”

Avon Wildlife Trust (AWT) is being partnered for the project by the Avon Gorge and Downs Wildlife Project, Bristol City Council and by Bristol Naturalists’ Society (BNS) whose spokesman, Richard Bland, says: "When I was young there was barely a part of Bristol where you could not see house sparrows. Now they are found in just a few areas of the city, and this decline is replicated throughout the West Country. It's vital we know where the surviving colonies are so we can protect them and start helping them to increase their numbers."

Modern housing is believed to be a main cause of the problem. According to Avon Wildlife Trust’s Steve Micklewright "Sparrows like to nest close together in roof spaces near the guttering, but modern construction and house renovations make this impossible.”

The charity will be demonstrating how lost nests can be replaced with easy-to-build artificial nesting boxes when Wild Sparrows is launched during a celebration of sparrows involving children from St Mary Redcliffe Primary School at Victoria Park, Bedminster, on Wednesday 10 February (11am start).

As the campaign develops, AWT will also be helping other communities to create new nesting sites and encouraging local gardeners to plant out insect-attracting flowers, such as nasturtiums, to ensure that sparrow chicks don’t suffer from a shortage of food.

During the next school half-term, there will be opportunities for families to build and decorate sparrow nesting boxes as part of the Festival of Feathers events at Avon Wildlife Trust’s two wildlife education centres – Folly Farm, Bishop Sutton, on Tuesday 16 February, and Willsbridge Mill, Willsbridge, on Wednesday 17 February. In addition, Steve Micklewright will be giving a talk – Where have all the sparrows gone? – at Bristol Zoo Gardens on Tuesday 9 March, 7pm start.

NB: See below for more listings info and a round-up of sparrow facts.

For more details, including guidance on how to identify sparrows and join the sparrow survey, see www.wildsparrows.org.uk or contact Avon Wildlife Trust on 0117 917 7270.

 

 

February 2010

  Dyrham Park walk
  Dyrham Park walk

Wildflower Grasslands Project launch at Dyrham Park

After an Introduction by Chief Executive Steve Grainger and with presentations from members of the AWT Living Landscape Team and Natural England, the Trust's Wildflower Grassland Project got off to an impressive start in 2010 at Dyrham Park on 3 Feb.

With over 40 invited guests, including landowners, farmers, representatives from Local Authorities, Parish Councils and conservation organisations, the project launched in the north and east of the Avon region, bringing together and establishing a network of parties in the region who were keen to hear all about the Trust's landscape scale conservation project.

Last year, as the first step in a programme of work aimed at expanding and linking up the dwindling areas of WildflowerGrassland, the Living Landscape team contacted 125 farmers and landowners and surveyed over 1000 hectares of land. This was mostly around Chew Valley, Stowey Sutton and around Lansdown and St. Catherines Valley just north of Bath. This year will see the team surveying land and working with landowners in the Cam Valley, Bathampton, Cleeve Wood, Dyrham, Horton and Lower Wood areas of the region.

The event also included a guided walk around the grasslands of Dyrham Park. Many of those present were able to help the project in a very valuable way by drawing on large scale maps to indicate where they had local knowledge of grasslands that might benefit from the attentions of the project.

A grand day was had by one and all - despite the weather!


  Simon
  Simon King
  Dick King Smith
  Dick King-Smith

January 2010

New Year Honours for Trust President and Vice-President

Simon King, President of the Trust, received an OBE for services to wildlife photography and to conservation and our vice-president, author Dick King-Smith, received an OBE for services to children's literature.

In the past 30 years Dick King-Smith has written dozens of books, selling over five million copies in the UK alone, and had one of his stories, The Sheep-Pig, turned into the hit film Babe. The 1995 film catapulted the author, who is to global fame. His first story, The Fox Busters, was published when he was in his 50s in 1978.