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Welcome my website.

Here you can find out a little more about my past, what I'm working on at the moment and  what my plans are for the future.

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You can contact me on any natural history subject, request a Walk & Talk or slide show presentation.

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Subscribe on the contact page and my blogs will be automatically sent to you by email.

Fifty years nature watching

with a camera.

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"This extraordinary fellow's journey through Britain, and indeed life, is an inspiration.

From press, radio and television to

 photo exhibitions to guided walks & talks.

If you want to know Steve, take a moment to

read a few paragraphs here and in his

 natural history CV below"

Michael J. Loates  Artist/Illustrator

Steve Homewood walks

I was born in Brighton, southern England, but as an adult in 1987 I moved north to the

Cumbrian Lake District after reading a book called  'Nature Detective' - by Hugh Fulkus. 

 The legendary fellow and I met shortly after my arrival by complete accident, we were both in Cockermouth post office at the same time buying a Fishing Licence. 

Occasionally I still take a fish for supper, such as the invasive Rainbow trout in this page background, that decimate the native Brown trout population,

but I now prefer to use my camera to 'catch' fish!

I subsequently spent twelve years exploring a totally different world to the one I grew up in,

but but returned to Sussex when my beloved South Downs become a National Park.

In particular as I feared that some of the mistakes, as far as nature is concerned, that were made in the Lake District might be made on the Downs and hoped that I might, albeit in an amateur capacity, be able to advise younger folk trying their best but not having the years of knowledge that I had accumulated, and that I might find time to follow up, with their help, to uncover and describe natural history events that fascinated me but had, so far, been overlooked.

( i.e. The symbiotic relationship between, red mites, Marbled whites and Jackdaws.)

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I hope you might like what I have written and what I aim to do here with this website.

I very much look forward to meeting new friends, naturalists and like minded people.  SJH

This is my Grandfather on my mother's side, Harold Victor Mason

 with a very large flatfish he caught in Newhaven Harbour c1950

He was known to most as 'Billie' a name given to him by his friend Rudyard Kipling who thought him, his diminutive size and his

story of being lost in a far away land, was like that of the character Billie Fish in Kipling's tale ' The man who would be King.'

During WWII he was stationed in Africa and spent 2 years with an

indigenous group of nomadic Pigmies who taught him to hunt,  forage and be part of nature responsibly and sustainably.

Thereafter he always wore a suit and tie when fishing to remind himself to be as respectful as possible when taking the life of

another creature in order to feed himself and his family.  

When I was just 10 yrs old Grandad woke me very early one morning to go look for a legendary  Pike with sharp pointy teeth that lived in the stream beyond the woods, across the sugar beet field, at the back of his house in Bognor Regis.

What I was about to experience was completely new to me, another world that I had no idea existed, it changed my life and made me who I am today.

I dressed as fast as I could and we passed through the back door and into the 4am darkness of a summer's dawn. The air was heavy with scents of damp earth, wet grass and honeysuckle blossom; and all enveloped by a cathedral of bird song.

"Talk if you must"  he said. "but in a whisper or you'll l break the spell that is the magic hour." 

I stood speechless for a moment.

"Don't just listen to things, 'hear' them and don't just look at things, 'see' them"  he said.

Those words were etched into my mind.

We crossed the field towards the trees under a dark royal blue star studded sky.

The woodland floor was almost the same!  A carpet of Bluebells studded with white wood anemones. "Roll your feet gently as you walk so as not to make a sound"  he said;

"Slowly slowly, catch ye monkey"

The sky had lightened a little and my eyes adjusted as we reached the far side of the wood.

Out in the water meadow yet another fantastic scene. A sea of ground mist, purply pink from the coming sunrise. Cows, seemingly with no legs, 'floating' on the mist. The moment is still hard to describe but at the time I said it all by just facial expression to Grandad, those same facial expressions he later taught me to use if I wanted to stop a Fox in it's tracks for a while.

He paused, then nodded for me to look to my left,  a fence post not ten feet away, it had eyes!

A fabulous barn owl sat there, almost a part of the sun bleached wood, it's eyes staring straight into my brain.  It turned, leaned forward and dropped, with wings open, into the pink 'sea' and outward, the tips of its wings flicking up little spirals of the mist.  My life was changed forever.

 

We never did see the giant Pike but I think that might just have been a trick

to lure that little boy me, out of my bed.

It was in the late 80's  that I went on an adventure to The Lake District, I stayed for 12 years and still have so much unfinished exploring that I need another life,

and perhaps an assistant!

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Fairy Glen, Stonethwaite beck, Cumbria.

"It's in that first valley on the left of the background photo".

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I risked my life for this photo of a wild Atlantic Salmon, plunging fully clothed into the ice cold water in December,

 I just had to get that picture!

Not a typical day by anyone's standards but this is how I spend most of my time, sometimes  just a short distance  from other folk but seeing things that might as well be a thousand miles away from them. 

I now live back in Sussex where I was born, and have settled in Lewes next to

the Railway Land Nature reserve by the River Ouse.

Half way between Lewes and the sea at Newhaven, is an old swing bridge

at Southease in the Southdowns National Park. I spend a lot of time here with my camera.

Here's a little winter movie from there.

Below is my Natural History CV  which I hope will prompt you to continue exploring my site but first let me tell you how

I came to take out folk on guided Walks.

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  While chatting to a young boy recently

about the things I know, he asked;

"Who taught you all that stuff mister?"

Referring to my Grandad, I replied;

"An old man taught me, a long time ago."

"How long ago?" asked the boy.

"About 40 yrs." I replied

"Well, now you're the old man haha!" He said.

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 It hit me like a brick, he was right.

 I then set about teaching others, in particular young people,

the wonderful things that I had stored in my memory bank.

Steve's Walks & Talks were born.

Oct' 2021

 I was invited by the Sussex group 'Greenhavens'  to have a stall at the their annual event in the Port of Newhaven to advertise my

guided natural history walks & talks and

to display some of the extraordinary

'Inside the wave view' photographs

that I took of the local Mackerel & Whitebait

migration/feeding frenzy... 

This one of a Mackerel (right) surfing the wave full of

Whitebait is my favourite. 

Christmas Eve 2021

 Volunteering  again for the Ouse and Adur Seatrout spawning watch team I was able to film a pair of these elusive fish spawning on the first day they were noted on my stretch, just before 'rain stopped play' and the river was in a spate again, thick with dirt runoff and the last chance of the year.

"Merry Christmas all"

 

 

                                                       CV 

( Natural History)

                                                        ---

1985 - My first Photo exhibition was in Shoreham by Sea.

 I was  highlighting the flora & fauna of a man made 'corridor'

The old railway line from Shoreham to Beeding cement works

   made a unique connection from the

South Downs chalkland habitat to the tidal estuary

adjacent to a SSSI shingle beach and brackish lagoon.

Consequently, I was invited by Adur District Council to form the

Adur District Conservation Society

and was voted chairman and task officer.

1987 - Having moved to the Cumbrian Lake District

I completed a course in Nature Conservation and Management

run by Newcastle University in Keswick.

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After a second photo exhibition in Carlisle Museum on the colour variations of individual Adders on the Solway Peat Bogs,

I took a 'further education' course also via Newcastle university,

on Peat bog formation and Biodiversity

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In the 1990's I hand reared and released Barn Owls into the wild.

The chicks were excess to requirements at the

Muncaster Castle Birds of Prey Centre.

I sourced, and was granted for the purpose,

a rough meadow habitat with

a healthy population of Short tailed voles

and an empty old barn and suitable owl nesting box

 by Lord Rochdale on his Lingholm  estate at Portinscale,

 on the western shore of Derwentwater, near Keswick.

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2012 - I was invited by the South Devon Natural History Society to give a slideshow talk (my first of many),

on my lifetime's experiences nature watching.

I was introduced by wildlife artist and author, Michael Loates,

who subsequently became a good friend.

 'Mickie' kindly illustrated my book 'Source to Sea'

with his spectacular paintings

2013 - I was invited to take part in an Environment Agency

netting and recording species survey in the R. Adur

 back at Shoreham- by sea.

2014 - I became a volunteer Sea Trout spawning recorder for

The Ouse & Adur Rivers Trust in Sussex 

which increased my fascination for photographing life

underwater rather than fishing.

2015/6 - I set about studying the mysterious annual spectacle of

Thin Lipped Grey Mullet at Lewes in the R. Ouse,

filming them underwater with a camera on a boom.

This lead to an appearance on BBC SPRINGWATCH

that I nicknamed  'A Murmuration of Mullet'

It was an unrecorded phenomena and lead to a series of

slideshow talks in the adjacent Railway Land Nature Reserve,

  for which I was awarded a honorary lifetime membership.

 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03wwztx?msclkid=8f8a7001affe11ecadcc60150fa0a72a

2017 -  I was asked by BBC RADIO SUSSEX to teach

roving reporter Simon Jenkins how to

catch a Mackerel, live on air.  I succeeded and was then asked to chat on air about my book 'Source to Sea' which was serialised over a week from the BBC in Brighton. I am regularly asked to join live chats on BBC stations all over the UK 

2018 - I was invited to stage a photo exhibition in Lewes

to highlight the natural History and views along the newly opened Egrets Way cycle and footpath along the River Ouse from 

Lewes to Newhaven

in the South Downs National Park

 

2019 - Walks & Talks were requested by many individuals,

groups and organisation on a variety of subjects;

 

 

2020 - Covid restriction came into force but as they relaxed I was one of the first to arrange Covid safe Walks & Talks

and was employed by Newhaven, Seaford and Lewes Councils and the Group; 'Love Our Ouse'

during  festivals to take groups

out on Tidemills beach on the subject of 'The Living Shoreline'

2021 - Commissioned by PhD student Esmeralda Pereira

at the Marine and Environmental Research Centre in Portugal

 to obtain genetic samples, via catch and release,

of British catadromous Thin-lipped Mullet Chelon ramada 

for studies of the migratory dynamic.

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I was very pleased to have been accepted as a member of

The Tide Mills Project, between Newhaven and Seaford.               From the shoreline to the railway line, the Mill and accompanying buildings were abandoned and destroyed ahead of the expected invasion of German forces in WWII

I have been asked to be a natural history guide alongside the historians during the celebrations in September.

Funded by the Lottery Heritage and the Southdowns National Park

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 Newhaven Town council invited me to do a series of 

'Reconnect to Nature' Walk & Talks

for the public during the whole of September and October 

as part of their Newhaven Festival

and

Brighton Council have also invited me to do similar

'The Living Shoreline'

as part of their October 2021

'Homeward Bound'  Festival

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 I was invited as after business speaker

at Railway Land Wildlife Trust Lewes

Sea Trout spawning in Sussex
The Living Shoreline - Newhaven
Southdowns National Park
Walks and Talks Subjects
Michael Strachan
Railway Lan Wildlife Trust Lewess
Mackerel and Whitebait in Sussex

2022

Film maker Jack Perks & Cameraman Ross Birnie asked for my help in making a piece for their project;  'Britains Hidden Fishes'

Twitter -  @RiverFishUk  @JackPerksPhoto 

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March 2022

I was invited to take 4 walks & talks via 'Visit Lewes' commissioned by Lewes District Council

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April 2022

I was invited by the Sussex group

'Fire and Wild'

to take regular Walks & Talks proceeding their fabulous 

woodland feasts of game,

foraged fruit, vegetables and herbs.

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August 2022

 

Perhaps my most unusual walk & talk was actually a request to Paddle & Talk for a kayak club who nature watched from the water in the Cuckmere valley in the Southdowns National park

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Sept 2022

I was invited to take out 3 back to back

illustrated Walks & Talks

for the 'Love our Ouse'

Festival.

As ever, I design my own posters

and photo packs for participants

Dec' 2022 

 

I was asked to take a Walk & Talk for the public and to advise the developers on ecological impact, around and adjacent to the new Eco housing development at Lewes in the Southdowns National Park.

The Pheonix Human Nature project is something unique to this area and I'm extremely grateful to be able to contribute my local knowledge.

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Feb' 2023

I was asked, by the editor of 'The Lewesian' magazine Sally Edwards,

to be their resident monthly Nature notes writer. 1st article Mar' issue

     I have always wanted to do that.

   Thank you Sally

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July 2023

I have been given an additional monthly Foraging page in the Lewesian magazine.

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After giving a talk on

Wildlife Gardening

at the

Royal Horticultural Society partner 

'Bates Green Garden'

Sussex

I have secured bookingd for

 Spring, Summer and Autumn

Walks & Talks

2024

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2024

I attended a course in Lewes run by Love our Ouse www.loveourouse.org

To become a volunteer

Citizen scientist/River guardian

 recording and reporting

on all elements of

condition and pollution of

 waterways in the River Ouse

system in Sussex

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