stroke. He beat my dog entirely out of the pit, insomuch that he was obliged to run among our legs for
shelter, and could not be forced out again ; for although Bonxie, as the bird is called, bad some respect for
us while we kept together, on him he had no mercy; every whip he fetched him made his own wings crack,
and the dog crouch into the hollows o f the moor, until we came up and relieved him. I followed one of
them to some distance from the rest o f my party, and received some rude salutes for my imprudence from
three of these birds, which made at me with the utmost rage. I defended myself the best way I could with
my gun, fired several times at them; but, as none dropped, the report did not startle them in the least, but
rather seemed to enrage them the more. When the inhabitants are looking after their sheep on the hills,
the Skua often attacks them in such a manner that they are obliged to defend themselves with their cudgels
held above their heads, on which it often kills itself.” It has a hoarse and strong cry, and lives much in the
manner of the Parasitic Gull, attacking the larger kinds o f Gulls as the other does the smaller, but never
meddles with birds to destroy them, nor attacks the lambs on the island, but, in its opposition to all
formidable intruders, protects them from the Eagle, who does not venture to prey there during the breeding-
season. In gratitude for its services, it was protected by a penalty o f sixteen shillings and eight-pence for
every individual shot; and when met with at sea by the fishermen, it always had a share of whatever fish
might be in the boat.
Captain Vetch, in his account of this species, published in the fourth volume o f the ‘ Memoirs o f the
Wernerian Society,’ says, “ The Bonxie or Skua-Gull breeds, I believe, in the British Islands only in
Shetland, and there only on the three highest hills—Snuke in Foula, Ronas, and Saxafiord. On Foula it
seems to have taken exclusive possession o f the Snuke, where it generally breeds at a height o f 1300 feet,
and nowhere else. It is easily tamed, and, I understand, is a very docile bird. I often observed it walking
about within a few yards o f the tent, and without any apparent fear ; when, however, its nest is approached,,
it shows a determination do defend its possession with its life. Ravens, Eagles, Hawks, or other birds are
soon driven from the territory it inhabits. On nearing the nest, an attack instantly commences ; male and
female in rapid succession descend from a considerable height, with a velocity and noise truly startling;
horses, cattle, and sheep are immediately put to flight, and receive no intermission o f attack till driven far
from the nest; and if man, bent on sinister purposes, continues to brave the Bonxie’s fury, he seldom
accomplishes his aim without carrying away marks of-war. The nest is a mere concavity in the ground ; the
number o f eggs, two ; the month of breeding, July. The young bird is a nimble, gallant little animal, and
almost as soon as hatched leaves the nest. On the approach o f danger, he secretes himself in holes or
behind stones with great art, and, when captured, makes a show o f defence that is quite amusing. The
number of these birds that annually breed at Foula probably does not exceed thirty pairs.”
In ‘ Some Observations on the Birds o f the Faroe Islands,’ by the late John Wolley, Esq., that gentleman
says, “ In the only two spots where the Great Skua now breeds in the British Islands, it is preserved only
by the utmost vigilance of the proprietors, one of whom, Mr. Edmonston, has succeeded in recovering the
stock, after it had been reduced to a single pair, in Unst. But in Faroe its breeding-places are numerous,
though its preservation demands great self-control on the part of the people, for its attacks upon anyone
approaching its nest are most irritating. Its blows are aimed at the head; with the full momentum o f the
bird’s body; and it returns again with the most steady intrepidity imaginable. The protection afforded to
it lasts only during good behaviour; when a colony is becoming too large some o f them are apt to begin to
attack lambs; they are then doomed to the infliction o f a battue, which is supposed to act as a warning to
the survivors for some years to come. It is said that only a few individuals acquire this bad habito-just M
in the Scottish Highlands it is a single fox or eagle which gels into the way of carrying off lambs, but
which evil-disposed one gives a bad name to, and is the death of, many o f its innocent brethren.
"The Skua is one of the birds o f which a certain number o f heads is required to be given inhy every
inhabitant annually, which reminds one of the mode in which Egbert endeavoured to extirpate wolves in
Britain. I do not know if this is now strictly enforced ; but I have seen the people collect heads, when they
had an opportunity, either o f this bird or the Raven, or the Great Black-backed Ghiltethat is, when they were
ready killed for them. I heard that several heads of the Hooded Crow or Richardson’s Skua might be
substituted for one of the larger birds. Skua is the Faroese name o f the bird.”
Mr. Dunn, who visited the Shetland Islands in 1831 and 1833, says ■■ the nest is usually constructed amongst
the heather or moss, the female mostly laying two eggs, but sometimes three." They are o f an olive-brown
blotched with darker brown ; and are two inches and nine lines long by two inches in breadth.
There is little difference in the external appearance o f the two sexes ; neither do the young differ from
the adult, except in having the feathers more broadly margined with reddish brown.
The Plate represents the bird in its breeding-dress, somewhat smaller than the naturabsize.