An unexpected visitor to the garden bird feeder this week: a
rook. They don’t appear in the garden very often, but when they do it’s usually
in early spring, when they are looking for twigs to renovate nests.
Ffty years ago, when we first came to live in this small market town in the
foothills of the North Pennines, on the edge of farmland, we used to have two
large rookeries close-by, but as the town has grown, with new housing around
its margins, they’ve shifted their nests further away. It’s a long-term pattern
of behaviour that has been well documented in many places: rooks generally do
not tolerate a lot of disturbance under their rookeries.
The rooks ride the gusts, sometimes settling into what
sounds like conversational cawing, often rising as a raucous flock for no
obvious reason. A few bring twigs to repair nests, others seem to be here just
to be sociable.
It seems strange to see these ungainly birds visiting the
garden bird table because their pickaxe beaks seem ill-adapted for picking up
sunflower and millet seeds, but they are birds
with a very varied diet.
Come summer, after the harvest, when the breeding season is
over, they’ll be pacing through local stubble fields, in the company jackdaws
and crows, looking for wheat, barley and oat seed that the combine harvester
dropped: nature’s gleaners at work.









