Posted by John Wilson on March 11, 2004 at 17:08:15:
In Reply to: Twitchers watch robin served rare (BBC News Story) posted by Bill Boeringer on March 11, 2004 at 11:21:44:
Yes, quite amusing really. In fact this bird had been present for some 4 weeks at least so most twitchers who wanted to see it had already done so. Poor bird tho'. It's amazing how often this happens - rare vagrant gets zapped by Sparrowhawk or Peregrine. This Robin was one of two in teh UK at aroudn teh same time as a Baltimore Oriole [in Oxford]. The other Robin was in Cornwall. The Oriole also suddenly disappeared - met a similar fate?
John Wilson, Cardiff, Wales, UK
: Story from BBC NEWS:
: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/3545679.stm
: Published: 2004/03/09 11:21:23 GMT
: © BBC MMIV
: Twitchers Watch Robin Served Rare
: Birdwatchers from all over Britain who gathered in Grimsby to catch sight of a rare American robin were horrified to see her eaten by a passing sparrowhawk.
: They were still setting up their cameras when the predator swooped down from a row of drab factories and warehouses on an industrial estate.
: The young bird, from the southern US, "didn't really live to enjoy her moment of fame," a twitcher told the Guardian.The robin's vivid red breast made her an obvious candidate for a lunch date.
: "It was a terrible moment," Graham Appleton, of the British Trust for Ornithology, which had spread news of the bird's arrival, told the newspaper. But the trust's migration watch organiser Dawn Balmer was more philosophical. "Most of these rare visitors eventually succumb anyway to cold weather or a lack of food, if not predation," she told the paper.
: The robin, whose scientific name Turdus migratorius derives from its long-distance travels within America, was probably blown across the Atlantic after being "caught up in a jetstream", Mr Appleton added.
: A member of the thrush family, with oily-black wings and tail, the American robin is as big as a British blackbird.