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Posts
- Category: Balcony Birding (continued)
- Category: Bird Eating Bird
- A magpie is trying its hardest to kill my last remaining baby blackbird….
- ADVICE ON ONE WAY TO DETER ATTACKS - FROM SOMEONE WITH 20 YEAR'S EXPERIENCE
- bird eating bird April 2009
- Bird eating bird in Hollywood
- Bird Like Dinosaurs had poisonous bites
- BLACKBIRD KNOCKED 3 BABY MARTINS OUT OF THEIR NEST
- BLACKBIRD SCREAMING FOR ITS LIFE
- Blackbirds Bravery
- BUZZARD BEING CHASED BY A CROW - WITH A SMALL BIRD IN HOT PURSUIT
- CATS AND SPARROWHAWKS
- Crow eating a blackbird
- CROW EATING A SWIFT ALIVE
- Crows and Jackdaws mobbing a sparrowhawk - please read as this is the story of one English garden
- Crows attacking a blackbird
- Crows treating blackbirds as friends or food
- dead sparrow with brain missing - The answer?
- DEAD SPARROWS WITH BRAINS MISSING
- FOR AND AGAINST RAPTORS
- HAWK DETERRANT BALOONS - A BRILLIANT IDEA TO KEEP SPARROWHAWKS AWAY
- IT WILL BE AN AWFUL WORLD WITHOUT SONGBIRDS
- JULIE'S SPARROWHAWK PROBLEM AND GARY'S TIPS
- Magpies divebombing a nest, keeping smaller birds off the feeders, attacking a cat and drinking from a dog's bowl
- Magpies raiding a blackbirds nest
- MAGPIES RAIDING EVERY NEST IN THE GARDEN AND KILLING EVERY CHICK
- PIGEON FLYING STRAIGHT AT A MAGPIE AND HAVING A BIT OF A FIGHT
- Rook eating a blackbird
- Sea Eagle Bird
- SONGBIRD SURVIVAL
- Sparrowhawk
- Sparrowhawk with its talons round a blackbird
- SPARROWHAWKS AND THEIR PREY
- SPARROWHAWKS DEVASTATING SPARROWS
- Sparrowhawks find a clever way to catch prey
- SPARROWHAWKS KILLING
- Sparrowhawks killing every swallow
- SPARROWS KILLING FLEDGLING BLACKBIRDS
- Standing Guard over a Blackbird
- THE SHORT LIFE OF A HAPPY YOUNG GREENFINCH
- Trying to protect blackbirds
- What is the answer? Let's ask the RSPB
- WILL THIS HELP STOP SPARROWHAWKS
- Category: Bird Feeding Problems
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on August 8th, 2009 at 1:12 pm
What is killing our swallows?
I work on a farm looking after horses. Its an ideal nesting place for swallows and every year dozens of pairs raise several broods with no problem. This year several early broods were successfully raised, but gradually I realised we were losing adult birds. I kept finding the wing and tail feathers where the victims were eaten usually under the nest. The attacks are always at night which rules out squirrels or other birds. The adult birds are taken in preference to the nestlings which are often killed and left on the floor. Twice the nests have been knocked down by the predator, but not always which rules out a cat and also some are very high and imposible for a cat to reach. A weasel would also have a problem accessing some of the nests and why would it bother with an abundance of easier prey around the farm? We have now lost about 18 adult birds and all their young. at this rate our entire population will be wiped out . Can anyone help us to save the remaining swallows?
on August 8th, 2009 at 6:12 pm
This is very strange. I haven’t heard of anything like this. I have rung an elderly Yorkshire Gent about this who is really knowledgeable about birds but it has puzzled him. He said if you were finding wing and tail feathers it could be a sparrowhawk, but as the nests have been knocked down it could NOT be a sparrowhawk.
We have ruled out an owl doing it as well as it would not knock a nest down.
We both thought that it could have been a cat but you say the nest is too high.
If the attacks are at night that does rule out squirrels
Adult birds are taken in preference to nestlings which are are often killed and left on the floor – interesting. So whatever kills them must be able to get into the nest? Is this right?
And the dead swallow is eaten – usually under the nest. – So it must be eaten on the floor?
that leave the possibility of a weasel. But I wonder if it is a cat?
It’s horrifying that you have now lost about 18 adult birds and all their young.
I am sending a copy of your letter to my Yorkshire Gent Friend and am also going to forward it to a charity called Song Bird Survival. they will have a lot of knowledge about birds of prey, cats etc.
Can I ask you where you live in England?
Sorry I can’t be of more help at the moment . Could you put a videocam pointing to the nests? I suppose that is a silly thing to ask.
Whatever is happening is strange. Trisha from Bird Table News.
on August 15th, 2009 at 10:57 am
Rats. The conclusion we have come to is that it is rats.