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Sunday, December 22, 2024
HomeBirdBirds of the Heath: Wildlife blogs: a gradual demise?

Birds of the Heath: Wildlife blogs: a gradual demise?


Once I first started my ‘Birds of the Heath’ on-line diary, my causes have been fairly straight ahead: it was a handy place to retailer (and share) my photographs and observations and, I hoped, can be a conduit for data and assist to me. At any time when I journey anyplace across the UK, I all the time test native blogs to see what is going on on.

One of many first options I added was a web page of hyperlinks to different blogs that I discovered gratifying and/or instructional. Ten years later I have been pressured to delete ten or extra damaged hyperlinks – blogs which can be not maintained or which have been dormant for a lot of months. (I’ve saved a couple of such hyperlinks to blogs that however stay price a glance!)

I discover this very unhappy. I’ve the sensation that there is perhaps three important causes for the decline in running a blog:

1)  Laziness! It does require a sure self-discipline to search out time frequently to type out photographs and write a little bit of textual content: not everybody will be bothered, particularly if their efforts usually are not rewarded by a good every day go to rely, or constructive feedback.

2)  Twitter / ‘X’   Regardless of usually being a considerably poisonous surroundings, Twitter has the benefit of immediacy: new chook finds are sometimes posted inside minutes, full with b-o-c pictures and instructions. Nevertheless, textual content is proscribed as are the quantity (and high quality) of photographs and movies.

3)  Lack of tourists   Because the variety of blogs with reciprocal hyperlinks drops, so does the variety of guests they generated. I’ve often invited different blogs to change hyperlinks and had no reply: this isn’t the case on Fb, the place my photographs are sometimes reposted elsewhere.

I observe that even among the hottest blogs and web sites (corresponding to Penny Clarke’s, Birdforum and Surfbirds) are displaying the same discount in every day ‘hits’: the Norfolk pages on Birdforum, for instance, have not had a brand new publish for months.

I form of hope that the current dissatisfaction with ‘X’ would possibly spark a resurgence in running a blog: I actually consider they’re a useful, historic useful resource.

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