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INTERVIEW
WITH TIM MACKRILL May
2005 We thought it was about time he
answered a few questions!
The
rest as they say is history! It varies from day to day. My
principal role centres around osprey fieldwork and so a good
deal of my time is devoted to monitoring the birds. In
addition I also help run our public events, analyse the data
collected by the volunteers and assist with the day to day
running of the project. Being at the nest site on 1
April when the breeding female (05) arrived back at the
nest. The male's display as she arrived was truly
spectacular.
Seeing
birds using the artificial nests we erected over the winter,
runs it a close second. Each time an unringed female
left.
Closely
followed by the realisation that Cat and Adele had eaten the
last biscuits in the shed, before I started my one and only
night shift of the year. Well aside from formal
qualifications (degree etc) then experience is vital.
Qualifications are one thing, but if you haven't got the
field skills to go with it, then qualifications will only
get you so far. The more experience the better, so come and
volunteer at Rutland Water for starters! Well ever the optimist, I would
like to think there would be 6 or 7 pairs. Aside from natural history, I'm
a big sports fan and play cricket, hockey and tennis
regularly. I also watch Leicester Tigers when I get the
chance. Scope, bins, notebook, sketch
book (well I try), chocolate biscuits, sense of
humour. I couldn't possibly say. This is
a family website. Too many to mention here, I'm
sure. "That's an impressive piece of
weed" (In no particular order.)
Tim is now the Rutland
Osprey Project Officer but at the time of this
interview he was one of the Field Officers. He had had
a long-standing association with the project, having
first worked as a volunteer in 1997 at the age of
15.
Tim, how
do you come to be working with Ospreys?
I've always been
interested in raptors and so when the Rutland project
started up, naturally I wanted to get involved.
You've
worked on the project for ages. Can you tell us what it
was like for you in those early years?
It was a real privilege to
be given the chance to work with these fantastic birds
at such a young age. The project was the first of its
kind in Europe and so it was great to be involved in
such ground-breaking work.

What's a
typical day in the life of a Field Officer?
Your best moment so far this year?
And the worst
moments?
If I wanted to
get a job like yours, what should I do?
In 5 years
time how many Ospreys do you think will be breeding in
Rutland?
What do you do
when you're not working?
What are the
objects that every Field Officer should carry with him at all
times?
What
constitutes a very impressive piece of weed?
Do you have
any bad habits?
What are your most over-used words?
(Editor's note - you need to see the Osprey
Project DVD to
appreciate this!)
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