Known to us all as a birder first and
foremost, Jonathan was a keen and accomplished sportsman in his early years:
opening bat for Llanrhian Cricket Club, county level badminton player, and single
figure handicap golfer at St David's Golf Club.
Always keen on the outdoors, initially with
gun and rod, as were most of his contemporaries in north Pembrokeshire. He gradually became less and less keen on
shooting game birds, abandoned his gun, and began to spend more time watching
them. He still enjoyed fishing for European
(sea) Bass throughout his life.
At first Jonathan’s birding was confined
to St David's and its immediate environs, of which he had a knowledge second to
none. A favourite tale from these early
days was going with the late Sean White, of Thousand Islands Expeditions fame,
to South Bishop in September 1992 for a “rare bird”. See image below from the 1992 Pembrokeshire
Bird Report for Jonathan’s account of this clearly exciting afternoon.
Gradually his interest spread to the
rest of the county and by the time of his passing his county list had just
reached the 300 mark, a number only a handful have ever reached. By this time the (in)famous St David's
Birders had formed: Jonathan, Byron Davies, Geoff Morris and Rod Hadfield,
later joined by Lyndon Lomax and Owen Roberts, with Stuart Devonald in an
honorary capacity as he lived far away from St David's: in distant Broad Haven
no less!
Together they visited many of the UK
hotspots including North Norfolk, the Cairngorms and south west England, before
spreading their wings to visit most famously Israel, where they were guided by
none other than Hadoram Shirihai, and Poland with Wildwings. In later
years Jonathan signed up for several trips overseas with Owen's St David's
based R&R Travels visiting Finland, Estonia, Cyprus, various parts of
Spain, eastern Turkey, Morocco, Hungary, Ecuador and, achieving a lifetime
ambition, Galapagos. Another much wanted
trip to Point Pelee, in Canada, was arranged but Covid intervened.
Not too long after Covid his inherited
arthritis began to become troublesome and he decided to retire from the
building business he had taken over from his father. Sadly his arthritis became worse and he was
never able to take full advantage of his few leisure years. His final new Pembrokeshire bird was last
October's Brown Shrike, near his beloved Porth Clais which Owen and Glynis took
him to see. Quite poignant, as the first
time they had met had been at another rare shrike, a Woodchat that Owen and
Glynis (Dave: it was surely Glynis!) had found in the mid-1990s on St David's Head.
Always full of fun despite the poor
health of his latter years he will be sorely missed by all who knew him. A very proud Welshman, but most of all a man
of Pembrokeshire, a county that other than for holidays, he never left from the
day he was born to the day he died. Our thoughts are with his wife Susan and his son Matthew at this difficult time.
(Owen Roberts & Dave Astins)
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| Jonathan in his Llanrhian Cricket Club days (courtesy of Llanrhian CC) |
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| Jonathan & Owen in Porthclais, October 2025 |
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| An afternoon to remember, September 1992 |