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Hovering Kestrel?

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Subject: Hovering Kestrel?
From: "michael norris" <>
Date: Thu, 17 Jul 2008 08:42:58 +1000
Three pieces of trivia - and a comment

First I recall (I hope correctly) some research where it was stated that kestrels hunt for mice by tracking their urine in the ultra-violet. Since mice have an open urethra they leave a trail for the kestrels to follow. The trail disappearing could explain why they break off their hovering.

Second (censored partly because of the filters), this from http://www.answers.com/topic/common-kestrel

Sometime before 1600 (first recorded in 1599), when the word was less taboo than now, the Kestrel was referred to as the "windf***er", no doubt due to its habit of beating the wind (hovering). This term was later replaced by "windhover", (first recorded in 1674), and eventually became entrenched through its use by the nineteenth century priest and poet Gerard Manley Hopkins in his famous poem The Windhover: To Christ our Lord.

Ironically a metallic sculpture, named the Windover after that marvellous poem, was put up in our foreshore at the time kestrels stopped breeding.at a nearby church (festooned with mobile phone relays).

It's at the top of a 20m cliff, typical of our foreshore, where the kestrels main mode of hunting is "hovering" into the sea breezes. (Hovering was also a common technique of the Kestrels where I lived in London - but I did once see one take a House Sparrow from the inside of litter bin.)

Michael Norris
Bayside, Melbourne


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