NDC Next to the irrepressible and iridescent starling, the rook has to be my favourite British bird. This gregarious parliamentarian produces one of the most evocative sounds in our countryside, instantly bringing to mind the bucolic image of stately elms in a rectory garden or of misty mornings behind the plough. It is a raucous call and only a rooky mother could find music in it. Over the centuries, this has combined less than benevolently with the rook’s ink-black plumage, scaly grey face and pick-axe bill to give the bird a bad name.
However, there was a time when rooks made up both an important part of the social ritual and the protein intake of rural communities. The formalised shooting of young ‘brancher’ rooks in mid May reached its apogee (like many sporting traditions) during Victoria’s reign, when young ladies were encouraged to wield dainty single-shot rifles, made specially for the job by the ever-enterprising gun trade. These beauties flung a slug of solid lead skywards towards the swaying fledglings and must have inflicted significant collateral damage across neighbouring parishes as they hurtled earthwards having passed through, or wide of, the rook.
This story is from the May 2021 edition of The Field.
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This story is from the May 2021 edition of The Field.
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