Wednesday 4 July 2012

Eel met by sunlight

On a rare warm evening, we did some rock-pooling at Kingsdown, followed by fish and chips in the setting sun. The tide was going out, leaving pools in the chalk platform and among the flint pebbles.

Streams of cold fresh water from the chalk hills flow from the shingle beach, and this had confused an eel that was trying to swim inland.
After a brief discussion on the principles of helping old ladies back across a busy road that they have just crossed (i.e. did the eel actually want to be helped?) it was decided to return it to the sea as otherwise it would have been stranded and left to the mercy of nearby herring gulls.


It's not easy to pick up an eel, by the way.


Browsing the usual Wiki-thing, I see that European eels are declining because of environmental factors, overconsumption and the introduction of parasites from farming stocks [that oft-repeated litany - sigh] and that IUCN have included them in their Red list.

From a personal point of view, I find their taste when jellied to be quite revolting and they may be reassured that I shall never touch them again.


Thanks guys!


There were also some starfish slowly slithering along in the shallows .....

..... and small dogfish dashed; whelks and winkles wandered, while sea anemones ...um... angled for food?     

Lovely evening.     Do not take living by the sea for granted.

2 comments:

Don Wood said...

Thanks for sharing your evening with us, I used to be able to rock pool but cant do it anymore the wheelchair makes it difficult.

Unknown said...

I'm so thankful for your blog! I love this area with all my heart having grown up here with our wonderful countryside as my playground! I've been going back through so many of your posts recently and enjoying them all.
I miss rockpooling, walking our local beaches, the cliffs, fields and woodlands etc. Unfortunately I've been bedridden/fundraising for a powerchair to get me back out and about the past 3yrs or so following a spinal/head injury.
Thankfully I get to enjoy great live video call walks with my partner around the area regularly though and plenty of photos from him, plus a little foraging, which included rockpooling and blackberries recently. Which was wonderful!
I do hope to get involved in protecting the area as well as making it more accessible once I'm out and about again within the following year and onwards!