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Author Topic: Pigeon owner protests at Derby Cathedral's peregrines  (Read 3180 times)
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Donna
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« on: 08-Sep-10, 10:00:55 AM »

A pigeon keeper from Derby has claimed his birds are being eaten by peregrine falcons from Derby Cathedral.

Wayne Hatton, who keeps high-flying Tippler racing pigeons at his home on Stockbrook Street, says the peregrines have feasted on seven of his birds over the past two years.

He feels Derby Museum is wrong to have installed a peregrine nesting platform at the cathedral in 2006.

But the RSPB says his pigeons are more likely to have crashed than been eaten.

Hatton told BBC Radio Derby: "It's unnatural for peregrines to be in a box on Derby Cathedral. They should be on a mountain or cliffs.

"The public might like them and think they're nice to see but they've killed 50 different types of birds."

But Guy Shorrock, senior investigations officer for the RSPB, says Hatton has got his facts wrong.

He said: "The comments on peregrines impacting on other birds are a bit of an urban myth.

"Peregrines are rare birds that sit at the top of the food chain. You don't have to worry about the population of other birds at all.
   

"For every 10 racing pigeons which are lost, nearly nine of them have nothing to do with birds of prey.

"It's actually things like straying and collisions which are the biggest problem."

Nick Moyes, from the Derby Cathedral Peregrine Project, said he had some sympathy for Hatton's plight.

He added: "I don't follow the logic of the argument that says a ledge high up on a tall stone building isn't the peregrine's natural habitat.

"I have to ask how natural is a pigeon loft?

"Peregrines were being reported on Derby Cathedral tower well over 100 years ago.

"They see it simply as any other cliff or mountain ledge and have probably been using it on and off as a look-out post for hunting ever since it was built 450 years ago."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/derby/hi/people_and_places/nature/newsid_8976000/8976731.stm For those of you with strong stomachs, (me not), I wasn't sure what this video was but it's a Falcon that brought back a live pigeon to the nest. I couldn't watch when I saw the pigeon struggling to escape. (Now I feel sick). I am so weak.
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Bobbie Ireland
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« Reply #1 on: 08-Sep-10, 10:39:24 AM »

The PFs that used to nest along the coast not far from me - on rocks overlooking the Irish Sea - are no longer there due to continuous persecution from pigeon racers. BirdWatch mounted a 24-hour guard there at one time, but when financing was no longer available, the fate of the birds was inevitable.
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jeanne
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« Reply #2 on: 08-Sep-10, 02:30:25 PM »

I didn't follow what the guy said about peregrines being high on the food chain so they wouldn't be feasting on the birds.  It has to be hard to be a pigeon enthusiast when peregrines are nearby.  I don't know how that could be worked out though.  Nature is not always easy to watch.  But this is the same argument that happens  with wolves and livestock.  With both peregrines and wolves, they only kill what they need to eat rather than like coyotes that just kill.  It hasn't made the conflict any easier though
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carly
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« Reply #3 on: 08-Sep-10, 05:55:56 PM »

Actually there is an easy to work this out in my mind.  Pigeons, whether you like them or not are meant to fly free - not to be a sport for someone who needs a hobby.  Capturing them and racing them is not a way to treat any species.  They were born to be free just like our falcons.  It's funny how we balk at being caged or made to be slaves but we have no issue doing it to other species.

If the guy needs a hobby, there are alot of endangered species that he could help in the UK - they can always use volunteers.  Just my two cents.
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Bird Crazy
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« Reply #4 on: 08-Sep-10, 06:03:22 PM »

 bravo good post
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MAK
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« Reply #5 on: 08-Sep-10, 07:57:54 PM »

Actually there is an easy to work this out in my mind.  Pigeons, whether you like them or not are meant to fly free - not to be a sport for someone who needs a hobby.  Capturing them and racing them is not a way to treat any species.  They were born to be free just like our falcons.  It's funny how we balk at being caged or made to be slaves but we have no issue doing it to other species.

If the guy needs a hobby, there are alot of endangered species that he could help in the UK - they can always use volunteers.  Just my two cents.

 clap   I agree Carly so now we have 4 cents!    Wink
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