They get up to about 4' 6" span, the one I saw was probably just under 4'What size are swamp harriers?
Golden eagle sized or buzzard sized???
Cheers James
They get up to about 4' 6" span, the one I saw was probably just under 4'What size are swamp harriers?
Golden eagle sized or buzzard sized???
Cheers James
They are trapped where I live.I saw a stoat in the garden the other day. Only the second time I have ever seen one. Its fur was exactly the same colour as the snow and I would not have noticed it at all if it had not moved.
That's interesting. Why is that? For their fur or are they just regarded as a pest?They are trapped where I live.
They are regarded as a pest eating ground laying bird eggsThat's interesting. Why is that? For their fur or are they just regarded as a pest?
They are regarded as a pest eating ground laying bird eggs
Hice mice....Hope they weren’t field mice!?
Nearby on the coast we had a zoo which fell on very hard times and replaced some of the animals with life-size plastic ones – I know you couldn’t make it up, when they went bust a local bought a full-size rhinoceros and sited it in his front garden overlooking a main road, with it’s head over the hedge sticking out towards the road, it was most alarming at first. IanDriving home from work some years ago I reached a roundabout on the dual carriageway just outside of Pontypool. As I nonchalantly exited it, I happened to glance out of my driver’s side window expecting to take in the view of the large open green fields running away into the distance on the other side of the dual......I did..... but then, at the last moment as I turned back, my brain did not immediately take in what my eyes had already spotted. Right at the base of my viewpoint there were two large animals apparently grazing happily in the field.....I vividly remember saying out loud to myself as I accelerated away from the roundabout “f*ck me!”.......it turns out the local farmer had allowed a travelling circus to temporarily let some of its animals the use of the field.......It was a bl**dy zebra and an elephant.
You had to be there....makes me laugh whenever I think about it
It has been surmised that if you place a piece of buttered toast on the cats back, butter side down, the cat will hover midair spinning constantly.Don't worry, if she is carrying the cat, she will always land on her feet lol
You are correct on their introduction at Stokenchurch and now luckily they flourish. I happen to be very fortunate to live near West Wycombe (so just down the road) and when I say they are local to our garden, I mean REALLY local . They soar above our house , our garden and the field behind us all day long and it is fantastic spectacle to watch . I must admit I have on the odd occasion shot rats in our garden (bloody vermin) and left the rat out on the shed roof. Lets just say they don't stay there for longA few years back I was trolling down the M40 on the slope down towards the High Wycombe turn (J3); cruising on the inside lane when I noticed a road kill in the emergency lane just ahead. I'd only just seen it when there was a rush to my left and I was overtaken by a Red Kite stooping into a pick-up. Successfully of course. I love driving that bit of the M5 from just South of Oxford. You rarely fail to see a few of these magnificent birds.
They were introduced along the ridge near Stokenchurch in the early 1990s I think and have now spread over to the west as far a where we live just below the Cotswold escarpment near Tewkesbury.
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