PALUMBUS TORQUATUS.
Wood-Pigeon or Cushat.
Columba palumbus, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 75.
— torquata, Leach, Syst. Cat. of Indig. Mamm. and Birds in Brit. Mus., p. 26.
Palumbvs----------- , Kaup, Natiirl-. Syst., p. 107.
I f the draining of our marshes and the reclaiming of our estuaries have been the means of destroying
or driving away many native birds, the progress of agricultural science and the increase in our plantations
have tended to the multiplication of others, and of none more than the Wood-Pigeon. No one, I imagine,
who knew England and Scotland fifty years ago, but must admit that the entire face of those countries
has been greatly altered—high cultivation and the planting of ornamental belts of firs and other trees
having effected a remarkable difference in its appearance. If this great change had resulted in the increase
of a more useful bird, we might consider ourselves fortunate; but in the case of the Wood-Pigeon this is
very questionable, and I therefore take up my pen to write its history with less pleasure than when similarly
engaged on the other members of our avifauna. To quote more than a few of the numerous articles which
have from time to time appeared in the public papers respecting its destructive propensities would he futile,
since they must be well known to all my read ers; but I shall attempt to place before them both the sunny
and the shady side o f the bird’s history, and allow them to draw their own conclusions as to whether the
pleasing traits in its character do o r do not counterbalance the injuries it inflicts. With regard to its distribution
a few words will suffice. During w inter the Wood-Pigeon is spread over every p art of the British Islands,
either in small companies or in immense flocks, which betake themselves to the open fields in the daytime,
and a t sundown retire to roost in woods, and plantations of fir and other trees. At this season it is shy,
wild, and distrustful; and few birds know better how to keep out o f harm’s way. It now feeds on cereals,
the seeds of wild plants, acorns, beech-mast, and berries, particularly those of the ivy, on the leaves and roots
o f turnips, their ravages upon which plant often occasion a very great diminution in the value of the crop.
In the spring the flocks are broken up, and their members retire in pairs to woods, plantations, shaws,
hedgerows, and shrubberies for the purpose of reproduction. A wonderful change in the disposition
of the Wood Pigeon now takes place; for it becomes as tame and confiding as it was formerly shy and distrustful.
I t no longer fears the approach of man, but, on the contrary, seeks his protection, and courts
his intimacy, frequently constructing its nest in his garden, perhaps in the ornamental cedar that
overshadows his house, and solacing him with its pleasing coo-coo-roo in the morning, and its beautiful
aerial evolutions during the other portions of the day. Such is its conduct during the season of
reproduction, and all right-minded persons will not, I am sure, allow its confidence to be misplaced, but will
permit it to remain unmolested until the period arrives when it will return to the fields and open country,
and a t once resume its usual craftiness. While writing the above passage, a letter has reached me, from
the Rev. Edwin Sidney, o f Cornard, near Sudbury, in Suffolk, in which he says :— “ I have two or three pairs
of Wood-Pigeons and Turtle Doves which breed in the trees round this house. They are never d isturbed;
and the former have become very saucy and mischievous, plucking up the young peas in the face o f the
gardener, and provoking him greatly. How well these creatures know that they are safe !”
I now proceed to the cloudy side o f the Cushat’s character* by giving some further details of the immense
injuries it inflicts upon our crops, and the baneful effects produced by these birds to any district in which
they may take up their abode.
To show in what vast numbers the bird is sometimes seen, I extract the following passage from a letter sent
to me by Mr. J . Illsey, dated Daylingworth, in Gloucestershire, February 2, 1 8 6 6 “ What has astonished
me more than anything else is the vast flocks o f Wood-Pigeons we have here this winter. I have seen
several, of fully a mile in length, pass overhead to the beech-woods, early in the morning. The people
call them ‘ foresters.’ ”
Now, if the country be suddenly covered with snow, and the favourite beech-mast, acorns, and wild seeds are
not to be obtained, the havoc such a flight would make among afield of turnips, to which they would certainly
descend, must be immense : on this head, a writer in ‘Land and W a te r’ says:— They settle on the turnip-
fields in hundreds. They begin by eating the young tender leaves from the centre o f the tu rn ip ; the water
lodges, the frost gets in, and it rots. I f you shoot a Wood-Pigeon in the winter when returning to roost, his
crop generally bursts with the fall, so full is it. Sometimes, if he has been gleaning, there may be some
corn or beans ; but far oftener there is nothing but a ‘ gowpen ’ (a double handful) of turnip-leaves. I have
seen p art o f a turnip-field so punished by Wood-Pigeons that I can compare it to nothing but a gooseberry