Falco Subbuteo - The Hobby
Saturday, September 4th, 2010This is a wonderful story and I want to share it with you. Last week, late at night, our neighbours came in and asked for our help. They had found a bird of prey lying on the ground outside their wood store. The likelihood was that it had been chasing a martin or a pigeon at dusk, and had flown into some telegraph wires. Either way, it was stunned. I got our cat basket from the shed and put the bird in it. I at first assumed from its colouring that we were dealing with a female sparrow-hawk. The bird simply looked at me with the detached gaze all birds of prey seem to have, as if it was saying to itself, ‘Well, whatever you are going to do to me, get on with it.’
I left the bird in its basket in my upstairs study, facing out towards an open window, so that it could hear the call of its mate. I also put a scallop shell filled with water into the basket. I left the bird lying down. When I returned in the morning, it was standing up. This seemed to me a good sign. So my neighbour and I took it downstairs and placed it out of the pen and onto the sward, hoping it might try to fly off. It was soon clear to both of us that the bird was incapable of movement. It could open its wings to their full extent, but then simply pecked forward onto the grass and lay there, looking at us. It was then I called my friend Tim, a professional falconer, who lives a couple of miles down the road.
“That’s not a female sparrow-hawk,” said Tim. “That’s a male hobby. Much rarer. There are only about 2000 breeding pairs in Britain. And he’s damaged his wing. In fact he may have broken a small bone in it. I’ll take him straight to the Hawk Conservancy Trust’s Bird Hospital.”
Last night, Tim called again. “He’s fine. He’s a mature male. He’s flying around his cage. Kim at the Trust has done a wonderful job on him. All he had was a bruised wing joint, probably from flying into the wire whilst in hot pursuit. Now I need to bring him back to exactly where you found him, and let him free. He’ll need to meet up again with his family.”
Tim arrived with the bird at 1pm today. As my neighbours were away for the weekend, Tim and I took the bird out to exactly where he was found. At first he wouldn’t leave the basket, so we gently tipped him out onto the sward. He looked at us, twisting his head almost completely around on its axis. Then he hopped a few paces and took off - straight up into the sky, like a dart. Within thirty seconds he was hundreds of feet directly above us, clearly checking his whereabouts - we could actually see him jinking here and there in the wind eddies, searching the nearby woods and above the lake with his eyes. “He’s looking for his mate,” said Tim. “Let’s hope she’s still here.” For a precious few minutes, he seemed to be performing, up there in the air spirals, just for Tim and me - higher and higher he went, until we had difficulty making him out any more. Then he stooped and disappeared.
Tim and I stood there for a while, watching the empty air. “Wasn’t that something?” he said. “In a few weeks time he’ll probably be heading back to Africa.” Yes, I thought. And taking something of us with him.