The Walsall American Kestrel
Dear All
Thank you kindly for all your comments, and the confirmation of my original ID as American Kestrel (which I have seen once in Chile and once in Brazil).
I never for once imagined that it was a wild bird. Although, as one of you pointed out, the nearby Chasewater has long been famous for turning up rare birds in the area. (I was a long-time member of the West Midlands Bird Club in my Walsall youth, and regularly went there.) I expected it was an escape, but to answer someone else's question - no, there were no signs of jesses, rings or other captive bird "markers" that I could see.
The Chuckery was always an area of pigeon fanciers in my childhood in the 1950s and 60s, rather than exotic falcon breeders, but interesting what someone else said about birds and chicks being easy to buy on the internet, which makes the provenance even more obvious...an escape.
Oh, and to put the civil and social records straight, Walsall is part of the Black Country, and is separated from Birmingham by 9 miles. And the M6 too, these days. The two areas should never be spoken of in the same breath (despite the late Mrs Thatcher's kind inclusion of both into the 'West Midlands'), for fear of offending the inhabitants of both areas.........!!
Thanks very much for the discussion, following this unusual sighting.
Best wishes
David