Why so Many Eagles Drown

by Carmel Rickard

DROWNING is a major cause of unnatural deaths in birds of prey. One of South Africa’s top bird specialists, Mark Anderson, says that a bird of prey with waterlogged feathers has little chance of getting out of a farm reservoir, especially if the dam is only partly full, because it cannot scramble up the sheer sides and it cannot fly up from the water if its feathers are too wet.

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Lesser Kestrels are in Smithfield reports Lynden Lund

The normally unmarked blue skies are filled with Lesser Kestrels.

They sweep like the strokes of a master artist, collecting and communicating for their evening roost.

A sight to behold, for sure

Eagle Saved From Drowning

by Carmel Rickard

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A helper holds the eagle saved from drowning.

Willie Swanepoel and his son Pierre are this month’s birding heroes. When they checked one of their cement dams recently, they found a young Verreauxs’ eagle waterlogged, exhausted and almost drowned.

This eagle, also known as the African Black Eagle or Witkruisarend, is a specialist dassie hunter and a magnificent bird to watch soaring over cliffs and mountain edges where its prey tends to live.

With distinctive patterning on the back and rump (forming the ‘wit kruis’ of its name) it’s unmistakeable. And it’s a large bird by anyone’s standards, with a wingspan of 2.5m.
There’s a pair that we sometimes see flying around Burnet’s Kop on the road to Beersheba and several farmers in the area record seeing birds from time to time.

The Swanepoels rescued the bird and released it when its feathers were dry. Before that though, they brought it round to show me – imagine seeing this creature of the highest sky held like a puppy on my verandah!

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Crisis Faced By Flamingos You Can Help Save Them

by Carmel Rickard

Have you been to see the flamingos at Kimberley’s Kamfers Dam yet? If you have not, you’d better get there quickly: even though this is one of the great birding sights of the world with potential to become a major tourist attraction, the local municipality has happily approved a new development project in the area that will scare off all the birds.

News of the proposed Northgate development reached the rest of the world last month when Carte Blanche ran footage of a public meeting on the issue followed by an interview with the then executive mayor of Sol Plaatje municipality (Kimberley), Patrick Lenyibi.

The mayor was understandably keen for the city to host a development that would see work and houses for many people, but he could not accept that there was a problem about siting it on the shores of Kamfers Dam where tens of thousands of Lesser Flamingos are breeding for the first time.

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The Owl in My Deep-Freeze in Smithfield

by Carmel Rickard

Most people keep a skeleton in their cupboard. Not me: I have an owl in my deep freeze.

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Owl ending

Carmel Rickard was more than a little surprised this morning 2008 06 16 to find a dead owl in a Rhus tree outside her house.

Top View: It appears to have dived from above?

View from the ground:

The bold brown and rufus markings were very clear.

Even the underside was brown and rufus colour.

The bright dark orange ring around the iris was very evident.

Another photo for size.

Photos by Lynden Lund

Smithfield is for the Birds – and on the Map

by Carmel Rickard

Birding history is being made in South Africa at the moment – and now in Aliwal North as well. A major project is underway, officially entitled the South African Bird Atlasing Project No 2 (SaBap, for short). The last time birders made an “atlas” of South Africa was 15 or 16 years ago, when everyone was involved in an official record trying to trace where which birds occur in this country.

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A different bird

Smithfield is hosting the annual BibberChill Festival on Friday 24 May 2008.

There are sure to be many birds around – definitely some of the feathered kind.

Support them.

Overshadowing Our Flamingo Story

by Carmel Rickard

WHEN people from Smithfield want to boast about the birds here we sometimes talk about the flamingos. On a good day there might be a few dozen “roomys voëls” trawling the edges where the little spruit feeds into the town dam, we say proudly.

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Marabou in Smithfield writes Lynden Lund

From the initial call from Willie Swanepoel to Carmel Rickard, until Fabrice arrived at the front door, the lines never stopped humming. A Marabou stork had been sighted near the outskirts of Smithfield!

Marabou stork
Arnold van der Westhuizen from Aliwal North arrived in record time to take the pictures.

As further reported by André Botha, Manager: Birds of Prey Working Group, ndangered Wildlife Trust:
“The tag number S64 indicates that it was tagged by Prof Ara Monadjem’s team from he Swaziland University as a nestling at a breeding colony in Hlane National Park in the Swaziland Lowveld during September/October 2007.

Based on your sighting, the bird has moved about 734km as the Marabou flies ince leaving the nest, but was also recorded by Reinderd Visser at
Oudtshoorn in mid-January and was present there for a few weeks.”