After a night of almost continuous rain, the prognosis for the day looked a little grim but as the daylight broke much of the cloud disappeared leaving the morning dry. On the grass verges close to the main road
So, returning to Peregrines, it was only yesterday long standing friend Ricky Lambert reminded me of the one I recorded on the Oil Rig Buchan Alpha in the North Sea some years ago. This juvenile bird was first seen to take an adult Great Black-backed Gull, with both ending up in the sea the falcon loosing its prey to both Gull weight and surface tension.
The next day it took another seabird, this time making it to the helicopter deck netting, but this was when one of our memories started to fade. Ricky maintained that I had told him it was a Gannet (which with my track-record could well be the case) but I remembered it as a Herring Gull.
Here the same image is enlarged for the readership to make up their own minds - answers on a post card please!
The finale to all of this occurred on the third day when once again it caught a Great Black-backed Gull and during the tussle in the moon-pool was caught by our Deck Foreman Ricky (The Hammer) Grant.
With that, a cage was quickly constructed and the Falcon flown to Aberdeen, for release, the next day.It'll be difficult for our 'merry band' of readers to believe, but some 'sad mother' somewhere has taken precious time out of their life to calculate (yes, calculate) that today is the most miserable day of the year! I'd love to be able to spare the time to have a gloomy day - what while there are things such as these in the world to see:-
Dedicated to Alexander James York (see yesterday;s Blog), as these too are all Australian.
and finally, with new born babies to the fore I was inspired this afternoon to play the recording I made when my first daughter Julie uttered her first sounds - brilliant. The disc also contains many snippets of baby learning, good job she was there to teach me!
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