Farnboro John
Well-known member
I ended up at Porthgwarra yesterday after seeing the Alder Flycatcher and changing my mind about looking for a mythical Yellow-throated Vireo in a traffic jam.
A juvenile Kestrel caught a vole and carried it to open turf on the cliff slope, where it stumped around with it for a while, decided not to eat it (it bent to it several times but never used its beak on it) and shoved it under the edge of a clump of grass.
It stood still for a minute or two then flew off out of sight, at which point I zipped down to where it had been and recovered what turned out to be a smallish Bank Vole (reddish back, bi-coloured tail). A bunch of us had a good look at it, couldn't find any obvious punctures but we weren't quite CSI in our PM I suppose.
In case the bird planned to return I put the vole back where the Kestrel had left it.
Anyone heard of Kestrels caching food before?
John
A juvenile Kestrel caught a vole and carried it to open turf on the cliff slope, where it stumped around with it for a while, decided not to eat it (it bent to it several times but never used its beak on it) and shoved it under the edge of a clump of grass.
It stood still for a minute or two then flew off out of sight, at which point I zipped down to where it had been and recovered what turned out to be a smallish Bank Vole (reddish back, bi-coloured tail). A bunch of us had a good look at it, couldn't find any obvious punctures but we weren't quite CSI in our PM I suppose.
In case the bird planned to return I put the vole back where the Kestrel had left it.
Anyone heard of Kestrels caching food before?
John