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SEAGULL RESCUE: PART ONE – ARRIVAL  Pictures and Post by Trudi in Plymouth

So, what Is it about these birds I love so much? Is it because they are handsome, intelligent and cheeky? Or is because they are so often despised by people and treated badly for only trying to survive like the rest of us?  There is no one aspect of these creatures that I fell for, it’s the whole package. I love all the gull family but it is the Herring Gull I find the most captivating.  How did this all start for me? Well it started about six years ago at work…let me begin.

I work in a Government office on the first floor. The first floor is actually at roof level and surrounds the courtyard in the middle. Six years ago we saw the first herring gull and his/her partner make a nest by the chimneys/flues and raise a little family of 3 chicks (so cute). They were actually at the furthest point of the roof so we couldn’t see all that well. After rearing their brood successfully they all flew away in September and we thought that was the last we would see of them.

One year later and the nesters came back to their old spot, but this time another two pairs of Herring Gulls also settled down and produced chicks. From then on, year on year we have had more and more gulls nesting on our roof. This year there must have been at least 30 – 35 nesting pairs (maybe more but we can’t see the other side of the roof). There were some gulls who weren’t actually nesting as they were too young but I think they were on the look out for a prospective mate as there was a lot of “love stuff” going on up there! It’s a bit like a singles club for them I suppose.

This year we probably had about 60+ chicks raised. Only two didn’t make it, and one of those was no longer a chick but a baby as big as his parents. He’d made a bad landing and broke his wing. We had to call the RSPCA and they took him away. I think they automatically put them to sleep as gulls with broken wings rarely heal and don’t respond well to captivity.

Anyway, over these 6 years myself and my friend have been lucky enough to observe these wonderful birds closely. One couple (we called them Jack & Vera) had their chicks right by our window so we saw the whole thing from the “love stuff” to the actually mating and eventually the egg production line. Vera had two chicks and she and Jack were attentive parents. Their babies (Tyrone & Molly) grew up to be healthy youngsters and have flown off to do what gulls do.

Unfortunately not everyone in our building likes these feathered visitors and at every Health & Safety meeting there would be the usual moans and complaints about the gulls making a mess and frightening staff. Yes, gulls do make a mess. All animals do. I pointed out to these people that we are the only species who wear knickers and have lavatories to deal with our own grot, but animals and birds don’t. Most of what comes out of a gulls backside is what we have thrown on the floor after a drunken night out. What goes in has to come out. Yes, the window cleaners have to work that extra hard to remove the odd splatter on the windows but there is nothing we can do about the poop landing on cars in the car park. If cars were parked under trees in London then the pigeons would do the same. People should think themselves lucky as in Nairobi the massive Malibu Storks nest in the trees and trust me when they let go your car really does get covered! As for frightening people, that is complete rubbish as the gulls don’t feed on our site, they see no threat to their babies from people eating in the courtyard or walking to their cars, and therefore have no need to scare anyone or attack. There has been NO attacks in all the years these birds have been nesting. An adult gull will never fly into the courtyard as they find it difficult to fly back out again. They are big birds and there is not enough space for them to get enough lift to reach the roof, but the babies who have new wings to control, can end up down there and myself and my friend go down and bring them back up (I’ll speak more about this another time).

Anyway, two years ago the building owners put up a gull scarer. A pole with an inflatable kite in the shape of a bird of prey. It went up in the courtyard, installed by the maintenance guy with the loudest mouth in the history of human foghorns. The gulls just took to the air and spent an hour screeching loudly and flying around in a state of agitation. The babies were still young and were left on the roof unprotected. Most of them were crying for their parents, obviously frightened by what was going on. After Foghorn had put the pole up, he tried in vain to fly the kite. It dropped out of the air like a lead weight and dived  into the bushes. Foghorn gave up and went in. Now even I know that putting something in a courtyard surrounded by buildings is not the best place to put up a kite relying on at least a hard breeze to get airborne. The courtyard was sheltered and no breezes get down there. The kite just ended up tangled and broken. After an hour the gulls resettled and just got on with life. Gulls 1 – Kite 0.

In 2013 however, the threat to our gullys (as we call them) suddenly got worse… To be continued:-

Here are pics taken by Trudi:

Jack and Vera before parenthood… then making love and then the beautiful Tyrone and Molly!

  • Eberhardt Huhn

    It makes me so angry how people expect to live in a white-washed world completely void of anything wild. They worry too much about poop, but should redirect that into thinking about using that as fertilizer (as it was, historically), and washing their hands when they come into contact with it. Kind of like when they wipe their own poop or their childrens’ poop off of their butts…

    I’m resucing a California Gull right now. Not sure how well it’ll go. She has a broken wing and was covered in mites and was very emmaciated. She’s been surviving, but barely. Most of the tail and back feathers are plucked out.

    Mites are gone, but I’m still working on helping her keep her fish down. Not sure if this one will ever be a release. Doing my best not to socialize it with humans, but very sad to watch the pain. Worst about it is that if it can’t be released it will have to be euthanized since it’s illegal to own a gull of any kind in the US… :((ReplyCancel

    • jenny steer

      Keep up the good work. I researched which excrement is the most dangerous…guess what! humans poo topped the list with cats, dog, then birds coming lower down!!!

      The thing is, with your law saying that you can’t ‘own’ a gull – isn’t it different if you are caring for it? JennyReplyCancel

  • Roger Chapman

    Help !!!!.
    I was at Saltash recycling this Sunday morning when I noticed a juvenile seagull in a tall skip he was motionless but clearly alive although unable to move trapped by bin bags and more being thrown in.I insisted one of the workers got him out they wouldn’t allow me to climb in.
    I brought him home and just let him settle before I offered food and water.
    Later on in the afternoon I noticed that he wasn’t standing and had never stood during the morning either,I had a look at his legs one was clearly broken and badly severed but the wound was by no means new.The other leg appears ok but he seems reluctant or incapable of using it.If this is the case how did he fly to the recycling depot and without the use of one leg he can surely never take off and survive . Can you help
    Yours Roger ChapmanReplyCancel

I went to the Seagull Summit with some trepidation but was pleasantly surprised at how East Devon District Council were not anti-gull at all. They want to find ways of living happily alongside the gulls – after all the gulls have been living here long before humans came along. EDDC have publicity including posters that encourage the public not to feed the gulls especially ‘food’ that is not good for them like bread and chips. There was some anti-gull sentiments coming from some of the audience but that was only a small minority. Here is the  link:

WESTCOUNTRY NEWS CLIP

 

  • Phil Dumas

    A seaside without gulls would be like New York without Yellow cabs.ReplyCancel

Well, I’m off to a Seagull summit in Sidmouth tomorrow. I am trying to gather info on gulls to counter any  reactionary talk. I’ll be going on my own and don’t think anyone from the RSPB or other caring groups will be there… so will be referring to my notes and hope I can contribute a positive thought or two! Bit scary. If anyone is available to come along please let me know. Jenny

An exciting development on this project… I came across the term Biophilia after watching a video of Bjork’s music project. I then saw it again a couple of days later in a meditation book. They talked of Edward Wilson, a Harvard University entomologist. He believed that we have biophilial urges for “the love of things” – plants, animals, wildlife etc and these are encoded genetically. How exciting! He encouraged a positive interest in nature for it’s protection and our ‘normalcy’ Edward Wilson actually conceived the term biophilia in trying to explain, “the connections that human beings subconsciously seek with the rest of life.” As humans we are deeply affiliated with nature and this is rooted in our biology. This is known as a philia – an attraction and positive feeling that people have in their activities, natural environment and towards certain objects. Conversely, a phobia (anxiety, fear, dread, loathing et al) is the opposite. –  Making for an aversion and fear of the natural world.

“Humanity is exalted not because we are so far above other living creatures, but because knowing them well elevates the very concept of life.”
Edward O. Wilson, Biophilia

“I have argued in this book that we are human in good part because of the particular way we affiliate with other organisms.  They are the matrix in which the human mind originated and is permanently rooted, and they offer the challenge and freedom innately sought.  To the extent that each person can feel like a naturalist, the old excitement of the untrammeled world will be regained.  I offer this as a formula of reenchantment to invigorate poetry and myth: mysterious and little known organisms live within walking distance of where you sit.  Splendor awaits in minute proportions.”
Edward O. Wilson, Biophilia

Due to overfishing and human impact on the environment some species of seabird’s around the UK’s coasts are in real danger of becoming extinct. Species like common guillemots, razorbills and puffins are struggling to cope with increasing challenges including a lack of food and the effects of climate change.

Allan Whyte, Marine Policy Officer at RSPB Scotland said: “Scotland is home to 24 species of breeding seabird and it is baffling that the Scottish Government chooses to ignore all but one when designating MPAs.  Puffins, kittiwakes, common guillemots and the rest are struggling to survive these tough times. The Scottish Government can and must throw these birds a lifeline and designate MPAs to protect this amazing group of species in danger of disappearing from our coasts. It is time we take action to give all of our seabirds, like Common guillemots, a fighting chance.”

The nature conservation charity is calling on the Scottish Government to designate Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) for the country’s internationally important seabird populations.

Watch this humorous short video…

Choose Sealife

 

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