|
| |
| COUNTRY |
|
| MATTERS |
|
Ulster Star
09/11/2001 |
|
We
would have settled for the choughs, never mind the aerial display, and
we sought them out along the north coast. They should live on the cliffs
at Islandmagee, I have always thought, although never saw them there.
They should also frequent Giant's Causeway, but the last time I saw them
there was some years ago, and from information to hand the though does
neither live at the Causeway nor on Rathlin now.
A search along the coasts of Antrim and Derry revealed not a single
though
So we moved further west into Donegal, and came upon a pair of choughs
in the townland of Macaire Gabhlain, which I am told means 'plain of the
treefork' Maybe they should re-name the place the 'plain of the
choughs'.
The though is an unusual bird, with red legs and a thin, slightly
down-turned, red bill. If you see a crow with red legs, it is a though
you are looking at. Please report any sightings.
The though used to be the common bird of, for example, Cornwall, where
it used to be called the Cornish crow.
It is now extinct all over England. Wales has some, with the interesting
fact that one pair bred 65 kms inland. The Isle of Man has some, and
more live
along the west coast of Scotland. We appear to have lost out Causeway
birds, but along the west coast of Ireland perhaps there is the biggest
concentration in western Europe.
So if you come across a though, I hope you find it in Islandmagee, or on
Rathlin, or the Giant's Causeway. If so that is progress. But if you
cannot see one there, you may head further west to Macaire Gabhlain.
Coming Events
Friday 9 November - Film of migrating geese, organised by
Castle Espie, in Spence's Cinema, Comber, at 7.30.
Tuesday 13 November Waders and Grazers, RSPB Roadshow at Lough
Neagh Discovery Centre, 6.30pm, details from 028 3822 2205.
14 November - Butterfly Conservation AGM, Ulster Museum, 7pm, why
not go along and see if you would join the swelling ranks of
lepidopterists, details 028 9335 5565.
Saturday 24 November Woodland Wander around Necarne, at
10.30,-Fermangh RSPB, who may be called on 028 6632 6654
Monday 26 November Lisburn RSPB have the Spirit of the Raven, a
talk by Robert McDowell, at Friends Meeting House at 7.30, more from 028
9260 1864
Thursday 29 November Birdwatch Morning at Castle Espie, 11.30,
phone WWT 028 9187 4146.
1 December - Lisburn RSPB outing to Newcastle and Dundrum Bay,
enquire further at 028 92621866
|
The north coast search for those elusive birds
ONCE again the north coast called in such a irresistible
way that we had to go. The excuse was crows, those large, (mostly)
black, (mostly) birds which are so much part of our countryside, and
indeed towns.
We were not in position to see any jays. They tend to live in woods and
forests, we were mostly on the coast.
I was thinking that the jay is our smallest crow, decided to check
'and found that the jackdaw is slightly smaller. The jay however is our
most highly coloured crow with pink, white, pinkishbrown and some black.
Then there was the magpie and with its black and white plumage it tends
to stand out.
I would hazard a guess and say it is one of our most instantly
recognisable birds, and a very common bird at that. We saw many that
day, not only on the way north but on the coast itself.
The magpie is a blow-in from England and Wales, first crossing the Irish
Sea in 1676 when it made a landfall in Wexford. The bird is very
adaptable, and takes advantage of whatever is going.
One good aspect of this is that it can clean up motorways and other
roads of dead creatures, like hedgehogs and cats, tearing at their dead
bodies and pulling off strips of flesh
This ability to take advantage of whatever is on offer works very well
for the magpie, and has enabled it to thrive and spread. Perhaps it is
the inclement weather associated with western and northern Scotland that
the magpie is not too successful there.
In some parts of rural England, where the magpie is unpopular because of
its fondness for eggs and young birds, especially game birds, the magpie
ha been hunted and shot, and this affects its numbers. But for the rest
of Scotland and England, the bird is common to very common, likewise in
Wales and England.
Another crow affected by persecution is the raven. Before the early 19th
century this bird was widespread, but now its range has greatly
contracted.
Ireland, Wales and Scotland has some ravens, but most of eastern England
is without them. We were not completely sure, but thought we had seen
some ravens in the distance that day.
Folk tell me that they see carrion crows at intervals, officially the
European crow with two forms, the carrion and the hooded crow. The
hooded is the common version in Ireland and the north-west of Scotland.
In England and Wales the hooded crow is non-existent, but carrion crows
are common. There were many hooded crows out that day.
Rooks tried to distract us with their aerial displays, but what we
really wanted to see were some aerial displays from choughs.
Go to to |
|
|