This mornings 5 miles

cipherdias

Settler
Jan 1, 2014
558
243
Wales
Managed a few good squirrel shots and some aerial combat between a pair of birds of prey of some kind :)

Humid with a few showers but a very pleasant 5 miles
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demographic

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Apr 15, 2005
4,762
786
-------------
I worked up at a place called Knaresdale near Alston a while ago and the only birds of prey I saw up there were a Barn Owl and a Kestrel. Loads of roadkill but I didn't see a single buzzard.

On a totally unrelated subject, there's grouse moors up there.
Same thing at a place in Scotland called Leadhills.

But there's no raptor persecution going on up there at all, No Siree... nope..They just keep eating dodgy meat, plus with all the leadmining they keep getting lead poisoning somehow.
 
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cipherdias

Settler
Jan 1, 2014
558
243
Wales

cipherdias

Settler
Jan 1, 2014
558
243
Wales
We currently have had an explosion of Red Kites in the area. Before lockdown it was rare to see more than one or two a week close to my home but now I see them every day.

These were taken at Bwlch Nant Yr Arian near Aberystwyth
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punkrockcaveman

Full Member
Jan 28, 2017
1,457
1,516
yorks
We are going through a similar boom of red kites in my area too, they don't seem to fear urban areas! They don't half get mobbed by crows though
 

cipherdias

Settler
Jan 1, 2014
558
243
Wales
We are going through a similar boom of red kites in my area too, they don't seem to fear urban areas! They don't half get mobbed by crows though
Has that happened since the lockdown started in March by any chance? It seems like locally there are a lot more about then there ever used to be.
 

Toddy

Mod
Mod
Jan 21, 2005
39,133
4,810
S. Lanarkshire
The last of the gleds (Scottish for the red kites; gled from the way they 'glide' through the sky) were killed in Stirling. A busy town, they roosted on the rock beside the castle. The story goes that they attacked a sleeping baby, so the Provost said there were too many of them and ordered that they were thinned out. Instead they men killed them all. They were already gone from most of the sporting estates thanks to the efforts of the gamekeepers.
In the towns they were useful scavengers, tidiers up of anything dead that might cause disease, etc.. Their absence allowed rats to proliferate, and corbies (black birds of the crow family, the word is used interchangeably around here) and now seagulls fill the niche.

Not surprised the crows and the gleds come to fight it out, I reckon they'll be in trouble with the seagulls though. They mob everything. The buzzards and the herons that fly overhead here have problems with them.
 
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cipherdias

Settler
Jan 1, 2014
558
243
Wales
The last of the gleds (Scottish for the red kites; gled from the way they 'glide' through the sky) were killed in Stirling. A busy town, they roosted on the rock beside the castle. The story goes that they attacked a sleeping baby, so the Provost said there were too many of them and ordered that they were thinned out. Instead they men killed them all. They were already gone from most of the sporting estates thanks to the efforts of the gamekeepers.
In the towns they were useful scavengers, tidiers up of anything dead that might cause disease, etc.. Their absence allowed rats to proliferate, and corbies (black birds of the crow family, the word is used interchangeably around here) and now seagulls fill the niche.

Not surprised the crows and the gleds come to fight it out, I reckon they'll be in trouble with the seagulls though. They mob everything. The buzzards and the herons that fly overhead here have problems with them.

Very interesting to read thank you.
 
Dec 10, 2015
423
188
South Wales
There is a lot of Kites around the valleys. They have been here for quite some years now. I think people are just noticing them more because of the lock down.
 

punkrockcaveman

Full Member
Jan 28, 2017
1,457
1,516
yorks
Has that happened since the lockdown started in March by any chance? It seems like locally there are a lot more about then there ever used to be.

No, since last summer, they have been frequenting the area perhaps 5 miles circ. around my house, I'm 99% sure they are from Harewood estate though as I believe they have a feeding program
 

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