Friday, 23 November 2012
Another leucistic kite on the loose!
Thursday, 15 November 2012
kite at sea!
Not every day I see a kite on the beach but this one at Llanon, Cardigan Bay, is a regular. Still looks a little strange with this background!
A more typical pose is on the new 2012 Xmas card: a superb image from our Chairman, Prof Mike Hayward, of a kite soaring over the winter landscape of Cwm Mwyro near Strata Florida: see Welsh Kite Trust new website for details of how to purchase. This location has,incidentally, been the long term home of an escaped Golden Eagle who is currently exciting visitors to the boardwalk on Cors Caron including our Patron Iolo Williams trying to make a film about it/(probably) him.
A more typical pose is on the new 2012 Xmas card: a superb image from our Chairman, Prof Mike Hayward, of a kite soaring over the winter landscape of Cwm Mwyro near Strata Florida: see Welsh Kite Trust new website for details of how to purchase. This location has,incidentally, been the long term home of an escaped Golden Eagle who is currently exciting visitors to the boardwalk on Cors Caron including our Patron Iolo Williams trying to make a film about it/(probably) him.
Monday, 29 October 2012
Kite vs Buzzard
Took my brother and his kids over to see the kites been fed at Gigrin last Thursday. Whilst sat in the hides watching the hundreds of birds diving in for food he expressed amazement at how they never collided. A short time late, whilst heading back home, my mobile went and it was Colin at Gigrin ringing to say they had a kite with a broken wing in the feeding area. It turns out that seconds after we left a kite stooping in for a meal had hit a Buzzard leaving after eating its! Anyone whose ever handled a Buzzard will know that they are a pretty solid bit of raptor! Anyway end result was an unfortunate kite with the outer half of its wing sticking out at not a good angle! Luckily my brother was heading back to Telford so could drop the kite off at Much Wenlock where Megan Morris Jones at Cuan House Wildlife Centre had arranged to get it checked out by her local vets. The bird was x-rayed but, as I had feared, the break was in the carpal joint, and these do not heal without causing permanent stiffening of the wing which renders the bird virtually flightless. Sadly, as our policy is one of no permanent retention, the bird was euthanised immediately .
Tuesday, 17 July 2012
That's got to be over 100 in Kite years!
We have a new longevity record for a Welsh ringed kite, at 8,723 days or about six weeks under 24 years.
HT27208 was ringed as a single chick in a nest near Ffarmers in Carmarthenshire on 17th June 1988 and was also tagged White H. It weighed 860gm, and was subsequently sexed as a female from the blood sample collected at the same time. She was found freshly dead on 5th May 2012 at near Harford which is about 9.5km SSW of where she was reared.
There is quite a long list of tag sightings in the early years. In the first winter she was seen at Ty'n-domen, Tregaron (the original Red Kite feeding station set up by Frances Evans) (8,5km N) on nine occasions between 21st November 1988 and 1st March 1989. In the first summer she was at Cwm Ystwyth (26km NNE) on 16th May 1989 and she was recorded there again in her third winter on 14th January 1991
In her third summer she was fouind breeding near Pumsaint, 9km S of the birthplace and reared a brood of two.
She bred again at the same place in 1992, rearing a single chick. She had a new mate, a tagged bird from near Cwrt-y-cano, HT27225, also reared in 1988. She had now lost one tag. She could have bred at the same place in 1993, but if so had lost both tags, and there were no further tag readings. Of course it's now pretty obvious that she must have continued to breed in the area for many more years. This bird beats the previous longevity record by about six weeks. That was a male HW08418 which was ringed near Pontrhydfendigaid in 1968 and which died near Tregaron, probably in mid-March 1992.
Thanks to Peter Davis for the above information. Amazingly, I can still remember tagging this bird as I'm pretty sure there was a Kestrel's nest lower down in the same tree!
Wednesday, 25 April 2012
Footnote
The previous post relates to an incident on 17th April. The good news is that the bird has since been released fit and well and the surprise attack has not been repeated...yet!
CANADA GOOSE ATTACKS RED KITE!
I fed the kites yesterday at Bwlch Nant yr Arian and we had a
great turnout of approx 100 hungry birds. There are some canada geese
nesting on a tiny island between the grass feeding area and the main
viewing spit of land opposite. During the feeding frenzy, one
unfortunate kite got a bit too close to the island and one of the geese
flew in to the kite on purpose. The kite crashed in to the lake just
in front of the spectators with the goose in hot pursuit. The goose
then landed on top of the kite and tried to drown it. The kite was
struggling to get to the side of the lake with the goose repeatedly
attempting to push it under. The attack lasted for about a minute.
Sarah
Cookson pulled the kite out and we tried to dry it off and warm it up
in the foot well of my car. After an hour it didn't improve. I took the
bird down to Llanbadarn Vets and left it with them. They will contact
Tony Cross at some stage - hopefully the bird can make a full recovery!
Andre Marsh
Friday, 9 March 2012
Sometimes they hit the ground
At Talsarn recently Susanna witnessed at close range a kite flying into the ground at feeding time and stunning itself. It hit breast first fortunately so after a rest it recovered enough to fly off strongly so nothing broken. Susanna said it was the first ever in 15 years to misjudge the slope of the field and no, it wasn't the one-eyed one!
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