Sunday, 30 June 2019

Rooks and Cuckoos.

he Martinstown Rook population seems to have been severely reduced in recent weeks. The eight nests in he Horse Chestnut tree outside my bedroom window which were such a hive of activity earlier in the year are now unused, as also are some others in the village.
The rooks were always the first to visit my bird table in the morning, taking their fill before the Jackdaws, next in the pecking order, arrived, but have not been seen for three weeks.. There has also been some anomalous behaviour in the Rooks' night roost as a large number  have, on occasions, gathered in Martinstown rather than in the woods near Bradford Peveral where they usually spend the night. It seems likely that there has been some culling, perhaps as a result of recent government changes in the permit system for shooting pest species.I can understand why Rooks, Carrion Crows and Wood Pigeons are on the list as pest species but Why, Oh Why, do Moorhens figure there?

I have sponsored one of this year's brood of Cuckoos. named Nussey. Born and reared by unwitting foster parents in the New Forest, it has been fitted with a transponder which will enable satellite tracking as it makes its way to the African rainforest where it will overwinter.
It is now in central France putting on  a bit of fat  to provide the energy for its long flight.

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