Travel Cat
Date: 2015-08-26 16:21:33 | Category:
Bird Feeding | Author: David Cole
So, just how much should we ‘manage’ the way that we react to the
wildlife around us?
Who are the villains of the
bird table?
Who should we encourage or discourage?
The trouble is that the Raptors also have to eat and feed their families just as much as the
Blue Tits – who have become so friendly this year that they take
food from the hand.
This has become an extended problem with the arrival at our garden of a youngish butterscotch coloured feral cat which has been seen feeding on bread at one of the flat platforms of the
bird feeding station at the front of our house.
My wife, well known by the
local wildlife as a very soft touch, has I notice placed a dish of milk under the hedge at the boundary – and the cat – slim and clean - has been using it. The hedgerow has numerous holes of varying sizes for the existing residents and the arrival of a major predator will have not gone unnoticed by the mice, shrews and even rats who make it their home.
The cat is, we think, from a nearby farm in an adjoining parish where noisy battles amongst the numerous unfed cats - which are tolerated for their vermin control activities means that lone ‘travellers’ appear from time to time, having been evicted by the dominant felines.
This is not always the case – some thirty years ago a large fat tabby appeared at our door on Christmas Day – shortly after a car had stopped a short distance up the lane – it had been dumped to take its chances and was lucky enough to meet my wife – it lived for about seven years in a nearby barn – and in its later years it was well fed – by you know who…….
So what do you do, the butterscotch one is just as much a creature of the wild now – he/she has to eat – just as much as the
Sparrow Hawk who makes periodic strikes at our branch-defended
bird tables – interfere – or just live with it?