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Well now I ve got a dilemma

(269 Posts)
BlueBelle Tue 30-Jun-20 22:37:22

My Victorian house has a fireplace in my bedroom one of those rather lovely old bedroom black lead fireplaces with a trapdoor
Well I m lying in bed hearing a lot of scuffling behind the trapdoor and realise a bird has fallen down the chimney so I pulled the curtains right back and opened the window then opened the trapdoor and there is a largish bird I can’t see its head just it’s legs and a bit of the body but the darned thing is sitting there not coming out I think it may be a rather large young seagull and I m a bit loathe to stick my arm in to get it out but I also can’t sleep with it sitting there
Watch this space

Susan56 Sat 01-Aug-20 09:16:33

Oh my goodness Bluebelle!!

Lovely that we know he has survived,can’t wait to tell DGD but poor old Stephen falling down the chimney again.

I think you have a friend for life!

rubysong Sat 01-Aug-20 08:56:15

Well done for rescuing Stephen again! Are you thinking of having a grille put over your chimney? We get lots of pigeons dancing on our bungalow roof and cooing to us but they can't get down. On the subject of birds, we have some really daft crows in this village. In the spring they tried to build a nest up under the eaves of the church roof. I watched them bringing large twigs and pushing them at the wall. They did it again and again. There was no way they would stay there and they all fell in a heap. They always brought fresh twigs, why didn't they see what was happening and try somewhere else, or pick up the ones they had just dropped? I collected them all up eventually so we could cut the grass. It took me ages.

Squiffy Sat 01-Aug-20 08:42:35

I wonder if there’s a YouTube video on ‘Learning to Fly’ that Stephen could watch?! ??

Lovely that you - and we! - now know that he’s survived! ????

Bridie22 Sat 01-Aug-20 07:48:10

He is obviously a troublesome teenager this one !

BlueBelle Sat 01-Aug-20 07:29:11

It’s funny I m watching him now he can’t quite fly he’s jumping up and down on the roof flapping his wings Violently but going no where he just can’t quite get the hang of it ....but the cavalry has arrived...... mum has found him

Bridie22 Sat 01-Aug-20 07:12:05

Hi bluebelle,
Looks like he is ready to fly, and just popped in to say thank you.!

BlueBelle Sat 01-Aug-20 06:39:07

I know you will never believe this but lying in bed playing sudoku this am I heard a familiar shuffling noise in my bedroom fireplace
Yes you know what’s coming don’t you I removed the Fireplace trapdoor and .......
There was a tail taking up the whole of the opening it was a much bigger one this time and my old heart was pounding I waited a bit but there was no chance of it getting itself down it couldn’t move or see where it was so it was back to the gardening gloves and hand up the opening and gently grabbed its body and pulled It was difficult but eventually it plopped out with a big old swark sat on the floor obviously unable to fly

I swear it’s Stupid Steven back again

Anyway I put him on my window sill he fluffed his wings waggled his stumpy tail and dropped straight onto the flat roof
below
He’s wandering around the flat roof now and every now and then he ll try and fly with those big old wings flapping up and down and his feet jumping an inch off the roof

Nothing more I can do now

Sparkling Wed 15-Jul-20 06:26:12

Let's hope Stephen has been rescued by mom. It's instinctive to save any living creature and you did your best. I hope another bird doesn't get I frequently have a woodpigeon fly into my patio window when closed, leaving a very good imprint of itself on the window, if ever the door was open and it flew into me I would be no more. The gardens full of them since new houses were built on woodland near by, the lawns have suffered too. They've got to go some where though.

BlueBelle Wed 15-Jul-20 05:36:43

We re not getting any fishing back evie don’t hold your breathe
Any animal that is a problem has been made a problem by human beings if the seagulls didn’t have filthy people leaving food all over the streets they wouldn’t be so problematic
When did this strange phenomena of having to eat in the streets happen ....when I was growing up it was considered very rude and in poor taste to eat in the street now no one can walk out the front door without having food or drink in their hand I live one minute from the sea and I m lying listening to them now all screeching and calling to each other they re all waking up now I wonder what they are saying
I didn’t try to save Stephen because he was a seagull but because he was a little chap in trouble I just hope he’s ok but I ll never know

Evie64 Wed 15-Jul-20 01:29:16

@Bluebelle, you right, but in Exeter, at least half an hour drive from the nearest beach, they are a real problem, albeit man-made, but a problem nonetheless. When I try and feed the Swans or Ducks or Geese on the River Exe, the gulls attack with impunity. I don't know what the answer is? Perhaps when we get our fishing rights back, they will revert to their natural environment? Lets hope so.

Alishka Sun 12-Jul-20 09:06:54

The more I think about it, the more sure I've become that his mum did a rescue mission when you were safely out of the way, OP.smile
While one-finger typing this I've just listened to David Attenborough's Tweet of the Day. He was talking about Emperor Penguins and their ability to recognise their chick's tweet out of hundreds....
I wonder if grown-up Stephen will bring his kiddies to show them off to his foster mum in time?

Feelingmyage55 Sat 11-Jul-20 14:39:44

I am convincing myself that mum came to the rescue. I used to love watching huge flocks of seagulls following the fishing boats. It is changes in society that have caused some gulls to change their behaviour. Humans have a lot to answer for. You tried Bluebelle and for that I applaud you. Only hope that there has been a happy, if unknown, ending.

Susan56 Sat 11-Jul-20 13:36:19

I’m another one sticking with the hope that his mum swooped down and got him??

SueDonim Sat 11-Jul-20 13:19:28

I’m sorry there’s been no sight of Stephen, Bluebell but let’s hope his mum managed a great escape for him. smile

I also agree that it isn’t seagulls that are the problem, it’s the humans.

BlueBelle Sat 11-Jul-20 09:43:07

downtoearth that’s so sad ??

My one hopeful feeling about Stephen is I ve never seen his mum since he disappeared She is no longer on my roof I m going to live with the hope that the constant rain made her feel she had to get him and get him she did I cannot find any other explanation so I m sticking with that ?

Alishka Sat 11-Jul-20 09:37:16

MissAdventure

It's no good, Bluebelle, you're going to have to call the police and report him missing.
Oh, I hope he turns up safe.

This still makes me laugh every time I check the threadgrin
Thanks for that MissA !

Callistemon Sat 11-Jul-20 09:32:57

Yes, they can be 'a pest' and we've had food taken out of our hands too but, as Bluebelle says, humans have created the problems.

Everyone was willing a baby seagull to struggle back to the nest in a Devon resort - but all saying that it would grow up to poo on cars and pinch food. But it was a baby and so determined.

downtoearth Sat 11-Jul-20 09:20:31

Shortly after moving to a Norfolk village we had chickens and alsorts of animals, word got round we where the Doolittle family, and injured birds and animal found their way to us, courtesy of my ex on his daily walk with the dog.

A baby starling was brought to us by the postman as he didnt know what else to do with it.

We nurtured and fed, and mashed worms and alsorts for its ever open little mouth, it would sit on my shoulder or spend its days following me around.

We where on the point encouraging to fly, and on this particular day had had left him in his box in the kitchen but had failed to close kitchen door.

Poor little thing had decided to practice his skills and flew in to the bathroom, seen the closed window, flew at it, knocked himself out fell into the toilet ( ex never put seat down), and drowned.sad

Loislovesstewie Sat 11-Jul-20 05:31:41

I'm sitting in my dining room looking out of the window . There are 2 seagulls looking at me. One comes into my back yard and wanders around all of the time. I wonder if he is the one who wandered into the kitchen when he was a fledgling ? And then calmly wandered out! I'm on the coast in Yorkshire BTW, I love to see them . It's such a shame that some people think they are not worthy of protection especially when you consider that human beings make such a bloody mess of the world.

BlueBelle Sat 11-Jul-20 05:08:14

alishka since he went I ve not seen the mum that’s why I keep my hopes up that she got him

evie you can put all the dampeners you want I will still consider all the gulls beautiful birds I live right by the seas and beach, Gulls were never a problem when I was growing up they have become a problem since humans decided to constantly eat and drink in the street, and to throw the remnants of their food wherever they want, our own filthy habits have evolved a beautiful, fish eating bird into a scavenger We have overfished and no fishing boats left for the gulls to follow and eat the fisherman’s thrown out remnants
We have no fishing any more
They ve had to go inland to survive

As always humans have caused this problem then moan and groan and deride the animals

Evie64 Fri 10-Jul-20 23:52:12

I'm really sorry to put a dampener on things, but I live in Devon and seagulls are a real pest down here. When they are nesting the parents are very aggressive and can attack people and animals at random. There was one young girl on a pier eating an ice cream. A seagull swooped down to grab it and in her panic she fell 20 feet over the side of the pier and was seriously injured. In Exeter they rip up all the dustbin bags the moment they're put out leaving the streets a terrible mess. I don't undersand why they are a protected species, they are thousands and thousands of them down here. If they just stuck to the seaside it wouldn't be so bad, but they invade every town and village down here. My husband calls them flying rats.

Alishka Fri 10-Jul-20 23:20:40

Just checking in to see if there's any news..sad
Is the mum still around, BlueBelle ?

Alishka Thu 09-Jul-20 23:53:25

Ahh, I've just read all this and seen the fab pictures. I want to think that, like your friends have said, his/her mum's taken Stephen off home and 'grounded' him so to speak, and given him a stern talking to. Going off without permission, having adventures with ladies, eating foreign food....hmm
No, if I were his mum I'd be keeping a close eye on him toogrin

Namsnanny Thu 09-Jul-20 22:30:35

me too. Chin up BlueBell, smile

MissAdventure Wed 08-Jul-20 23:19:04

I'm hoping that no news is good news.