Photograph: Derby Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust |
We immediately rang both Radio Derby and the Royal Derby Hospital facilities team. The story emerged that an adult peregrine had been found bloodied and injured at the bottom of a small courtyard which acted as a light well to the seven storey hospital building. Luckily a falconer employed by the NHS Trust happened to be present that day (he comes every week from a professional pest control company to use their own falcons to reduce the pigeon problem around the new hospital). He took the bird back with him and to a vet for examination.
Peregrine falcon just before release. Last seen heading towards Mickleover. (Photo: Derby Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust) |
At this time we don't know where the falcon came from; we do know that other peregrines are seen from time to time over Derby, though these normally get seen off from the city centre by the resident birds. Meanwhile, our own injured falcon from 2009, Cathy, is still being cared for by our local falconer. She has always been well enough to fly (I've flown her myself), though we knew she would never have the ability to hunt and feed herself in the wild. We are currently discussing what arrangements we make for her in the future, and hope we might be able to get her seen by more people and school children than has been possible up to now.
You can follow the original story of Cathy here and here and here
Nick Moyes
Peregrines and People Technical Advisor
Interesting Nic..... what year was it that we didn't ring ours... ? x
ReplyDeleteLets hope The released Peregrine, can find its way back to the eye clinic, at the city hospital as it clearly has a problem with its right eye
ReplyDeleteHi nick m. Glad that the Peregrine was ok and flew off ok! Just a thought could the peregrine Have bn one of ours that wasn't ringed from a few years ago? Wen u couldn't ring the juveniles can't remember the year! From Christine
ReplyDeleteJust how clever are these birds! Imagine knowing where the hospital was, and which day the falconer was going to be there. Amazing. I have just bought a new book - Peregrine Falcon by Patrick Stirling-Aird. It's very good.
ReplyDeleteIf memory serves me right didn't one of our juvenille birds a few years ago lose its ring on its leg, there is a chance it could of been one of our birds but we will never know
ReplyDeleteMo: it was 2010 that we didn't ring the two surviving chicks (that year, two died in the nest if you recall).
ReplyDeleteAnon: the colour rings can fall off due to wear or abrasion but the metal BTO rings never do...they are there permanently. So if the injured hospital bird was one that we had ringed, the BTO ring would still be present even if the colour ring had fallen off.
Nick B (DWT)
ps. In 2006 we only put BTO rings on the three chicks that year.