Opinions on Pigeons
By markle
- 1461 reads
Until recently I never had much time for woodpigeons. They
always seemed quite puddingy, birds that galumphed and little else. Once, in
the garden, I watched one perch on the water butt. I glanced away for half a
second and it had fallen in. I picked the daft thingout and sighed as it
pottered to and fro on the grass drying off. My abiding memory is of looking down
at it as it drifted, blue-grey and white, on the dark water, with one white-ringed
uncomprehending eye gazing at me as I lifted its feather weight.
I could make a case for woodpigeon as glutton. When I put
the bird food out, a robin lands almost immediately. Then the magpies come, confident,
intelligent, but one or two hours later I look out of the window and there are
woodpigeons stamping up and down, great shoeboxes of birds, picking up every
last grain.
Woodpigeon as prey: the neighbouring cats have had a few,
and a sparrowhawk once smashed one in the act of taking off. Once or twice the
“chack-chack” alarm call of a blackbird has launched a pigeon into the glass of
our back door. It’s a gruesome sight when a bird with a broken neck, its head
drooped by its flank, is shuddering through its final breaths.
And yet - “Coo, coo, I love you…”
My daughter gave this summary of the pairing of pigeons in
our garden. Just outside our back door is a panel fence that only looks
pleasant in summer, when the raspberries are ripening. Pairs of woodpigeons use
this fence as their love arena, where the male, puffed up and startlingly iridescent
green around the neck trots sideways to and fro from the female, dipping and
ducking as he does so. When the female accepts him they beak-wrestle, heads
pushed close together and seeming about to wind neck about neck. It’s an
engaging sight, as is the display flight, like an up-and-down stroke in
Japanese calligraphy, the descent marked by spread wings and tail as if the
brush tip were being pressed a little harder to the page.
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Comments
you've caught well, the
you've caught well, the calligraphy of living things.
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I didn't know as much about
I didn't know as much about them, and do tend to feel them a bit boring and messy in the garden, but have seen them sitting as a pair on the fence more attractively. I presume it's their call that seems so monotonous often in the background though from the trees around, and I tend to filter it out, stop hearing it. It seems more like a 'Oo oo oo oo …' Rhiannon
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I love their call, it seems
I love their call, it seems like the sound lavender would make :0) Always makes me feel safe. And the way they bustle about all importantly. You end with poetry again, beautiful
"an up-and-down stroke in
Japanese calligraphy, the descent marked by spread wings and tail as if the
brush tip were being pressed a little harder to the page."
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Very engaging, you've
Very engaging, you've described their character thoroghly here. They are such a common sight thesedays in suburbia, much like Magpies. As for them being daft, a professor of horticulture once told me that they are in fact geniuses and slowly, methodically will decipher how to thwart any attempts to prevent them eating seeds or crops.
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