A lone bustard on the wide expanses of "Schedule 1" farmland on Salisbury Plain. |
Bustards are often seen as figures on the sky-line and they have usually seen you long before you see them. Their heads are raised like periscopes as they examine you, then they slowly walk away over the hill with a slow, stately gait.
As we admired the lone, distant male we could see, I suddenly realised that much closer, only about 75 metres away, there were three males, their heads just raised above the spring barley. The two older males stood up and began to walk away from us.
We watched them for some time before they decided to fly over onto a more distant field. The Great Bustard is the heaviest flying bird in the world, yet it flies with such power and speed. You might imagine that it would lumber into the air like a swan and then heave it's way across the sky flapping madly to keep its great body airborne. Quite the opposite, they are truly majestic in the air. To see bustards flying across the open expanses of the Plain is to truly understand why they are called "Great" Bustards.
A mature, bearded male Great Bustard flies across Salisbury Plain. |
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