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January 2024                         January 2024

 BERE REGIS WILDLIFE AND
 ENVIRONMENT GROUP


 A very HAPPY NEW YEAR to you all. Now is the time to
 make a resolution to get out and enjoy the wonderful
 natural world in our local area.

 The Twelve Days of Christmas
 In most traditions, the twelve days of Christmas begin on Christmas Day and run
 from December 25th to January 5th. Some traditions, however, hold that the first
 day of Christmas is the day after Christmas Day, December 26th and the 12 days
 run through to January 6th.
 Whichever view you hold to we are now nearing the end of that period As you
 know,  The  Twelve  Days  of  Christmas  is  an  old  English  Carol  featuring  mainly
 animals.    A  partridge  is  an  English  or  grey  partridge.  Turtle  doves  are  now
 extremely rare in the UK. French hens are thought to be Breton hens. Calling birds
 (or  ‘colly’  in  early  versions)  meant  blackbirds.  Gold  rings  were  thought  to
 represent ringed pheasants, or ‘gold spinks’, an old name for goldfinches. Geese,
 a  farmyard  variety  originating  from  the  wild  greylag  geese.  Swans  a-swimming
 were probably the mute swans we are all familiar with. Lords a-leaping in some
 versions were hares running, typical hare behaviour in the breeding season. The
 carol was written in the 18  century when the population was predominately rural
 th
 and more familiar with country living than is the case now.

 The Days are Getting Longer
 Ok,  maybe  not  by  much  –  but  have  faith,  they  are!  You  may  have  already
 noticed bulbs peeping through in gardens, and the Christmas Rose or Hellebores
 are starting to come into flower. A number one welcome sign of spring for many is

















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