Elizabeth Kay's Blog
July 19, 2025
Apologies for long absence

Over the last three years I have had some eye problems, and arthritis in my hip. Hopefully the eye will be resolved with a small operation at Moorfields, one of the best if not the best eye hospital in the world, which just happens to be local to me! I may need a hip replacement, but there are a few investigations to be performed first. This means my travel plans have been somewhat curtailed, but I did manage a birdwatching holiday in the Gambia, run by Naturetrek, which was excellent. Most of the group were of the same equally mature years as myself. I bought a particularly apt T-shirt for my husband, and had a couple of enthusiastic enquiries from other wives on the trip.

I would like to give a big plug for Merlin, the birdwatching app run by Cornell University. It identifies birds by sound, and also by photograph. I had no idea how many different birds we had in our garden, as it picks up the ones with soft, high-pitched voices such as the goldcrest and the firecrest. I also realised that if I'd taken a photograph of a bird on my travels I had obviously seen it, so I entered them all as well. Currently I have 544 birds on my life list! Some of them are really unusual, such as the hoatzin, which I saw in Venezuela in 2008 and the Amber Mountain rock thrush - Madagascar, 2023. But there are so many really beautiful birds as well, and there are a lot of different rollers in Africa which deserve a mention - and a photo. Paradise flycatchers live up to their name, and so does the resplendent quetzal, which I've seen in Costa Rica but not photographed. So I've become a birder, but not a twitcher. They're obsessives!

Malagasy paradise flycatcher

If you're interested in identifying what's in your locality, do try the Merlin app. Make sure it's the Cornell version, and not something else. Happy birding!



bee-eater, Botswana


April 19, 2023
Namibia - and a long-hoped for encounter
I know I am fortunate in having travelled as much as I have. I do use my trips to gather material for my books (the opening of The Divide came from a holiday in Costra Rica), and I take photographs for watercolours. It took me many years to finally see a leopard, but just like buses, you wait for ages and then a whole load of them come along.



They were so impressed that the lodge bought them one of their own, and every evening they scapered across the veranda, dashed through the bar, and put themseves to bed. But in the morning there was nothing they liked better than being picked up by a nice warm human, and cuddled inside a coat... What was so delightful about all of this is that no bribery was involved, as they were not fed. It was their choice to interact with us, and one of the best experiences of my life.

There were some pretty good birds, too!



November 25, 2020
Using lockdown to explore your locality
I'm lucky in that I live close to some lovely countryside, and consequently some excllenet walks. The M25 is on my doorstep, so it's not totally rural around here. But I've been walking on Epsom Common, and along the River Mole, and I've discovered a wealth of willdlife. Here are some photos of the creatures that have brightened my life over the last few months.







December 11, 2019
Cambodia







September 23, 2019
Leopards!

It's taken me twenty-six years and eleven different game parks to finally see a leopard in the wild. I've been to Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda, Malawi, Zambia, Ivory Coast, India and Sri Lanka, and every time they've eluded me. Frequently it was the jeep in front of me, or one behind that managed a sighting, which was infuriating. But this August I went to Botswana, and had the holiday of a lifetime. It's a wonderful country, and there's loads of wildlife and a small human population. I was wild camping with a group of people, which meant we had hyenas and honey badgers sniffing round the tents at night, and we could hear lions roaring and elephants trumpeting. We saw a pair of cheetahs grooming one another, and a young male lion left to babysit his three-week-old cub for the first time. He didn't really know what to do, and the cub kept yelling for mum. And I saw four different leopards, all told. It was really exciting holiday in many ways, so here are some photos.





December 3, 2018
Tigers!





November 29, 2018
Uzbekistan

This was the most amazing place, with a a wealth of really beautiful architecture. The ceilings are particularly fine, but the only way to capture them is to lay your phone down on the floor and hope you get your finger out of the way in time to take the picture!

We went to Khiva, Bukhara, Samarkand and Tashkent. The buildings are all harmonious, and emanate sense of calm.

It's a great place to visit. The people are really nice, the food is good, and the clothes are beautifully embroidered and cheap.


July 18, 2018
Camera trap and pirated downloads
I had a camera trap for my birthday - this is the fox who visits our garden. I have also been made aware of various sites who offer free downloads of my Divide books without my permission. These may be trying to collect your data so that they can scam you, so beware.
May 1, 2018
Russia


Bob and I have been visiting Russia; Moscow and St Petersburg. The metro is just as ornate as we were led to believe.




November 28, 2017
A brazzle and a hummingbird...

Another excellent picture from Caeleigh Graven - this one's of Fuzzy.

And this is a cinnamon hummingbird from Nicaragua,where I went in the summer.