Arquivos de periódicos de novembro 2020

02 de novembro de 2020

The Telford trap

"Telford Gardens" always seemed a fanciful description in a city where "X Gardens" generally denotes a concrete jungle of high-rise flats surrounding a shopping mall. To be fair, however, Telford Gardens does contain a tiny garden. And the garden has acquired a certain fame, or perhaps one should say notoriety, as a mecca for migratory birds. The garden is, literally, a migrant trap. Surrounded by high-rise blocks on all sides, it appears as an oasis amid the concrete jungle. Perhaps it was the tiny pond which this autumn attracted a Ruddy-breasted Crake. This morning, the habitually crepuscular crake could just be made out sheltering in the middle of a hibiscus bed. A gardener helpfully volunteered that if he sprayed water at it, it would come out (and allow itself to be photographed). Before I could protest he fired his hose into the flowerbed and sure enough, the terrified crake came skittling along the flowerbed, allowing for a blurred record shot which just sufficed to show its ruddy breast. Now, a crake is not equipped for VTOL. It takes off horizontally, like a gallinule taking off from water. In order to escape from this enclosed space, a bird needs to achieve a daunting angle of climb which a crake may not be capable of. The prospects for the crake to escape from this migrant trap do not look good.
Meanwhile, the star bird of the season, a Middendorff's Grasshopper Warbler, was effectively captive on another tiny flowerbed. Although the authorities had erected a barrier keeping photographers a meter away, it was still being photographed by long lenses at point blank range. At least the warblers seem to be able to escape from the trap, since Lanceolated and Pallas' Grasshopper Warblers have recently passed through and moved on.

Posted on 02 de novembro de 2020, 12:14 PM by stephenmatthews stephenmatthews | 2 observações | 0 comentários | Deixar um comentário