<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33"></SPAN></span></p>
<h2>MARCH: THE WOODPIGEON</h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">The</span> woodpigeon is many things to
many men. To the farmer, who has
some claim to priority of verdict, it is a
curse, even as the rabbit in Australia, the
lemming in Norway, or the locust in Algeria.
The tiller of the soil, whose business brings
him in open competition with the natural
appetites of such voracious birds, beasts, or
insects, regards his rivals from a standpoint
which has no room for sentiment; and the
woodpigeons are to our farmers, particularly
in the well-wooded districts of the West
Country, even as Carthage was to Cato the
Censor, something to be destroyed.</p>
<p>It is this attitude of the farmer which makes
the woodpigeon pre-eminently the bird of
February. All through the shooting season
just ended, a high pigeon has proved an
irresistible temptation to the guns, whether
cleaving the sky above the tree-tops, doubling
behind a broad elm, or suddenly swinging
out of a gaunt fir. Yet it is in February, when
other shooting is at an end and the coverts<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34"></SPAN></span>
no longer echo the fusillade of the past four
months, that the farmers, furious at the sight
of green root-crops grazed as close as by
sheep and of young clover dug up over every
acre of their tilling, welcome the co-operation
of sportsmen glad to use up the balance of
their cartridges in organised pigeon battues.
These gatherings have, during the past five
years, become an annual function in parts of
Devonshire and the neighbouring counties,
and if the bag is somewhat small in proportion
to the guns engaged, a wholesome
spirit of sport informs those who take part,
and there is a curiously utilitarian atmosphere
about the proceedings. Everyone
seems conscious that, in place of the usual
idle pleasure of the covert-side or among
the turnips, he is out for a purpose, not merely
killing birds that have been reared to make
his holiday, but actually helping the farmers
in their fight against Nature. As, moreover,
recent scares of an epidemic not unlike
diphtheria have precluded the use of the
birds for table purposes, the powder is burnt
with no thought of the pot.</p>
<p>The usual plan is to divide the guns in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></SPAN></span>
small parties and to post these in neighbouring
plantations or lining hedges overlooking
these spinneys. At a given signal the firing
commences and is kept up for several hours,
a number of the marauders being killed and
the rest so harried that many of them must
leave the neighbourhood, only to find a
similar warm welcome across the border.
Some such concerted attack has of late years
been rendered necessary by the great increase
in the winter invasion from overseas.
It is probable that, as most writers on the
subject insist, the wanderings of these birds
are for the most part restricted to these
islands and are mere food forays, like those
which cause locusts to desert a district that
they have stripped bare for pastures new. At
the same time, it seems to be beyond all
doubt the fact that huge flocks of woodpigeons
reach our shores annually from Scandinavia,
and their inroads have had such
serious results that it is only by joint action
that their numbers can be kept under. For
such work February is obviously the month,
not only because most of their damage to the
growing crops and seeds is accomplished at<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></SPAN></span>
this season, but also because large numbers
of gunners, no longer able to shoot game,
are thus at the disposal of the farmers and
only too glad to prolong their shooting for a
few weeks to such good purpose.</p>
<p>Many birds are greedy. The cormorant has
a higher reputation of the sort to live up to
than even the hog, and some of the hornbills,
though less familiar, are endowed with Gargantuan
appetites. Yet the ringdove could
probably vie with any of them. Mr. Harting
mentions having found in the crop of one of
these birds thirty-three acorns and forty-four
beech-nuts, while no fewer than 139 of
the latter were taken, together with other
food remains, from another. It is no uncommon
experience to see the crop of a woodpigeon
that is brought down from a great
height burst, on reaching the earth, with a
report like that of a pistol, and scatter its
undigested contents broadcast. Little wonder
then, that the farmers welcome the slaughter
of so formidable a competitor! It is one of
their biggest customers, and pays nothing
for their produce. One told me, not long ago,
that the woodpigeons had got at a little patch<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></SPAN></span>
of young rape, only a few acres in all, which
had been uncovered by the drifting snow,
and had laid it as bare as if the earth had
never been planted. Seeing what hearty meals
the woodpigeon makes, it is not surprising
that it should sometimes throw up pellets
of undigested material. This is not, however,
a regular habit, as in the case of hawks and
owls, and is rather, perhaps, the result of
some abnormally irritating food.</p>
<p>Pigeons digest their food with the aid of a
secretion in the crop, and it is on this soft
material, popularly known as "pigeons'
milk," that they feed their nestlings.
This method suggests analogy to that of
the petrels, which rear their young on fish-oil
partly digested after the same fashion.
Indeed, all the pigeons are devoted parents.
Though the majority build only a very pretentious
platform of sticks for the two eggs,
they sit very close and feed the young ones
untiringly. Some of the pigeons of Australia,
indeed, go even further. Not only do they
build a much more substantial nest of leafy
twigs, but the male bird actually sits
throughout the day, such paternal sense of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></SPAN></span>
duty being all the more remarkable from the
fact that these pigeons of the Antipodes
usually lay but a single egg. Australia, with
the neighbouring islands, must be a perfect
paradise for pigeons, since about half of the
species known to science occur in that region
only. The wonga-wonga and bronze-wing
and great fruit-pigeons are, like the "bald-pates"
of Jamaica, all favourite birds with
sportsmen, and some of the birds are far
more brightly coloured than ours. It is,
however, noticeable that even the gayest
Queensland species, with wings shot with
every prismatic hue, are dull-looking birds
seen from above, and the late Dr. A. R.
Wallace regarded this as affording protection
against keen-eyed hawks on the forage.
His ingenious theory receives support from
the well-known fact that in many of the
islands, where pigeons are even more plentiful,
but where also hawks are few, the former
wear bright clothes on their back as well.</p>
<p>The woodpigeon has many names in rural
England. That by which it is referred to in
the foregoing notes is not, perhaps, the most
satisfactory, since, with the possible exception<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></SPAN></span>
of the smaller stock-dove, which
lays its eggs in rabbit burrows, and the rock-dove,
which nests in the cliffs, all the members
of the family need trees, if only to roost and
nest in. A more descriptive name is that of
ringdove, easily explained by the white
collar, but the bird is also known as cushat,
queest, or even culver. The last-named,
however, which will be familiar to readers of
Tennyson, probably alludes specifically to
the rock-dove, as it undoubtedly gave its
name to Culver Cliff, a prominent landmark
in the Isle of Wight, where these birds
have at all times been sparingly in evidence.</p>
<p>The ringdove occasionally rears a nestling
in captivity, but it does not seem, at any
time of life, to prove a very attractive pet.
White found it strangely ferocious, and another
writer describes it as listless and uninteresting.
The only notable success on
record is that scored by St. John, who set
some of the eggs under a tame pigeon and
secured one survivor that appears to have
grown quite tame, but was, unfortunately,
eaten by a hawk. At any rate, it did its kind
good service by enlisting on their side the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></SPAN></span>
pen of the most ardent apologist they have
ever had. Indeed, St. John did not hesitate
to rate the farmers soundly for persecuting
the bird in wilful ignorance of its unpaid
services in clearing their ground of noxious
weeds. Yet, however true his eloquent plea
may have been in respect of his native
Lothian, there would be some difficulty in
persuading South Country agriculturists of
the woodpigeon's hidden virtues. To those,
however, who do not sow that they may
reap, the subject of these remarks has
irresistible charm. There is doubtless monotony
in its cooing, yet, heard in a still
plantation of firs, with no other sound than
perhaps the distant call of a shepherd or
barking of a farm dog, it is a music singularly
in harmony with the peaceful scene.
The arrowy flight of these birds when they
come in from the fields at sundown and fall
like rushing waters on the tree-tops is an
even more memorable sound. To the sportsman,
above all, the woodpigeon shows itself
a splendid bird of freedom, more cunning
than any hand-reared game bird, swifter on
the wing than any other purely wild bird, a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></SPAN></span>
welcome addition to the bag because it is hard
to shoot in the open, and because in life it was
a sore trial to a class already harassed with
their share of this life's troubles.</p>
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