Grey Lag1 Goose.
Anas onset', Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 40.
fems, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 510.
Anser ferns, Steph. Cont. Shaw’s Gen. Zool., vol. xii. p. 28.
palustris, Flem. Hist. Brit. Anim., p. 126.
einereus, Mey. Taschenb. Vög., tom. 3, p. 552.
sylvestris, Brehm, Vög. Deutschl.. p. 836.
—:— vulgaris, Pall. Zoogr. Rosso-Asiat., tom. ii. p. 222.
rubrirostris, Hodgson ?, Swinh. Rev. List of Birds of China in Proc. of Zool. Soc., 1871, p. 416.
T h e true habitat of the Grey Lag Goose is the temperate and northern regions of the Old World; as yet it
has not been found in any portion o f the New. However general its distribution may have been in the
British Islands in former times, it is at present confined to the northern part o f Scotland, the Hebrides,
and may be sparingly seen in Ireland. Indeed it is from this latter country that the specimens which
form the subject of the accompanying illustration were received, for which I am indebted to the Earl
o f Enniskillen, a nobleman well known for his love of science and as a liberal supporter of several o f its
numerous branches, especially those embracing the study of the living objects by which we are surrounded,
and as an investigator o f the treasures o f by-gone ages. The properties of the Earl o f Belmore, at
Castle Cool, and o f Sir Victor Brooke, at Lisnaskea, co. Fermanagh, have, I understand, from almost time
immemorial, been frequented by flocks of wild geese; and it is through the kindness o f the former
nobleman and his steward, Mr. Hosegood, that Lord Enniskillen obtained for me the very fine pair, male
and female, on the 15th of December, 1868.
Mr. R. Gray, in his ‘ Birds o f the West o f Scotland,’ after speaking o f the Grey Lag Goose breeding in many
parts of that country, and o f their nurseries on the bleak hills o f the outer Hebrides, states that “ it is common
in North Uist, Benbecula, and South Uist, and is found occupying the breeding-stations early in May. Mr.
Harvie Brown took a nest o f eggs which were hard sat upon, on 2nd May, 1870; but Mr. Elwes, who visited
the Long Island in 1868, saw flocks o f as many as thirty together later in the season. The nest, which
resembles that of a Great Black-backed Gull when found breeding on heath-clad islands, with the exception
o f being lined with down and feathers, is generally placed in a tuft of coarse grass, or among rank heather,
and contains from four to six eggs. When the young are fully fledged, they keep together in family groups
for some weeks, and are often seen shifting their quarters from one side o f the island to the other.”
During a visit to Lochs Shin and Merkland, as well as several parts of the Reay Forest, in the autumn of
1 8 6 7 ,1 saw Grey Lags and their broods of young in sufficient numbers to convince me that they might be
considered a common bird in those parts o f the British Islands; and that it was not less abundant on the
numerous lakes o f the west coast of Sutherland and Ross-shire will be seen from the following extract from
a note transmitted to me, after my return to London, by my excellent and kind friend the Marquis o f Westminster
“ Loch More, September 4. You will like to hear about the Grey Lag Geese. The forester on
the shore o f Loch Merkland fired into a lot o f fourteen, wounding four ; they pursued them in a coble, and
procured one, which we ate ; they will try to get the others.”
I shall close this paper with some extracts from an amusing and, I am sure, very truthful account of one
mode o f shooting this bird on its native lochs, which appeared in ‘ Land and Water’ on the 15th of October,
1870, under the title o f “ A Wild-Goose Chase in Sutherland” :—
“ The breeding-places of the Wild Goose are yearly becoming more circumscribed all over the north; and
even in Sutherland, where, perhaps, they were more numerous than elsewhere, they are now confined to one
or two districts, the most fertile being a chain of lakes, with islands and rushy margins, running for about
eight miles across the interior o f the county, from Badinloch to Gemsary. Here the Grey Lag, principally
with a few o f the Bean Goose and Pink-footed Goose (the latter, however, only rarely), still breed by
hundreds. We are inclined to think that the different sorts o f Geese do not mix or associate during
the breeding-seasou, but, on the contrary, form separate communities until disturbed, when they take refuge
on the water in one large body. They float and plume themselves here in comparative safety all day, and
at night land on the grassy feeding-places, eating up and soiling the very finest pasture in such a manner
that deer or sheep will scarcely approach it after them. For many a day, with the exception of a solitary
boat following a flock and potting a few, none, either young or old, were killed; and some years ago it