Thread: OT
View Single Post
  #9   Report Post  
Old 01-07-2005, 11:48 PM
Brian
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Janet Baraclough" wrote in message
...
The message
from "Brian" --- 'flayb' to respond contains these

words:


"Tom Atkinson" wrote in message
...
Last evening I was sitting in the garden
admiring my wife's handiwork when our cat growled. I heard what seemed

to
be
cats mewing. I looked up and
saw two buzzards soaring and crying to each other. Superb.
Tom Atkinson

~~~~~~
We have too~~ They will not remain much longer, however, as they've
totally finished the local songbirds. Even the Wrens were pulled out of

the
hedge/bank.


That sounds more like sparrowhawks. Buzzards are too unwieldy in
flight to catch small birds on the wing or hopping about in hedges
(unlike sparrowhawks who can manouevre at high speed even in copses).
We've always had a lot of buzzards around and they make no noticable
impact on smaller bird numbers at all. IME they mostly catch small
mammals, more or less by crashlanding on them :-)

Janet~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Definitely buzzards. They've nested in the same scots pine for more than
twenty years. One chick was kicked out some years ago which I reared and
flew for three years.
Trouble only started when we stocked the dovecote with 40 white
fantails. These were quickly taken by actually entering the cote and in one
instance taken from my hand when trying to rescue the injured bird!! [plus a
scratch and bite]. The buzzards soon 'evolved?' to realise that birds
were their easist prey. I've seen them searching within the hedges for nests
with young~~ lately the last of the hiding wrens!!.
By mid July they have to widen their search area but return to nest.
One year I phoned the RSPOB but was warned of a £200 fine if I even
disturbed their nest~~~ I promptly offered to pay in advance but was warned
of even more dire consequences etc.
The garden is large, isolated very rural and just about self sufficient
for a pair of buzzards.
They also seem to have taken the young tawny owls that had nested in my
'hide'. Their feathers were in the grass in the familiar buzzard pattern. A
great pity.
Best Wishes Brian.