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Thank you very much | Diolch yn fawr
All at JackArmy.net would like to thank everyone who has played a part on this site over the past 25 years whether that is through writing, contributing, moderating, posting or just visting and reading.
Without any of you the work that has gone into the site would have been pointless and we will always be proud that we built, generated and managed a community that was such a big part of the Swansea City supporting life for so long.
It has been a pleasure to bring to you the site for so long but the time is now right to turn the lights out for the last time but we do it both with a heavy heart and a sense of pride driven by the so many messages received since we announced the closure.
The site will remain here for a period until we archive and mothball it for the last time later this summer but all aspects are in a read only format.
I was on my way home on Friday across the Somerset Levels and was only a few minutes from home when a guy flagged me down to ask me if I knew where there was a metal plate across the road. I told him I'd just driven over it, gave him directions and asked him why he wanted to know that. He said a guy had just messaged him on Twitter that there's a mega-rare bird been sighted near there, an American Golden Plover. I went home, looked on line and it said "Normally a bird that migrates from North to South America, a few individuals are recorded in Britain each autumn" so I picked up a camera and drove over there which only took 4-5 minutes and when I got there the guy was just getting out of his car so I joined him and we only had to walk about 200 yards and there it was, just sitting in a field near a couple of pools about 100 yards away, occasionally pecking at the ground. So here's a photograph I took of a genuine rarity:
Spent a few days in northern France this week and spotted this lovely female Cuckoo in a tree quite close to me and just managed to get this pic as she was turning away before disappearing
Then about 20 minutes later spotted her again in a more static pose but a bit further away
The public have been asked not to approach the non-native bird themselves, as it may be 'shy and scared', but the Plantasia attraction has stressed it's 'not in any way dangerous'
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