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17 September 2014
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Farmland | Gigrin Farm

Red Kites in flight

Gigrin Farm in winter (Image c/o Gigrin Farm)

Thirteen years ago Gigrin Farm, mid-Wales, was just another upland sheep farm nestled high above sea level in the Wye and Elan valleys.

But today the farm is a popular visitors' spot thanks to one of the largest populations of Red Kites in the UK.

Winter wonderland at Gigrin Farm.
Photo courtesy of Gigrin Farm


To witness the spectacle of feeding time at Gigrin Farm, you'd never guess that the Red Kite almost disappeared from Britain during the 19th century, when it was hunted by farmers who considered it a pest.

By the early 20th century only a handful of pairs remained, most in mid-Wales, and it's only a recent conservation effort which has brought the Red Kite back from the brink of extinction.

Red Kite country

Kite in air (Image c/o Gigrin Farm)Red Kites have now been reintroduced in England and Scotland and there are now 1,000 pairs in the UK, with over half of them in Wales, so it's only fitting that this remains one of the best British locations to see the magnificent red kite.

Today the farm is known as Official Kite Country after being recognised by the RSPB in 1994, and is also home to a Welsh Kite Trust Rehabilitation Centre, which opened in February 2003 and treated two injured kites within its first month.

It's also the first official Red Kite Feeding Centre in Wales, with daily feeding sessions attracting up to 300 birds at once and getting through up to a quarter tonne of beef a week.

Another feeding station also caters for smaller birds, including Yellow Hammers, Redstarts and three types of small finches, which find it hard to find food during the winter due to more intensive farming which leaves less grain behind for wildlife.

There's also a 1.5mile nature trail takes visitors through an area of wetland where wild ducks, Herons, Gadwall and various Wagtails can often be seen.

Red Kites in action

Red Kite (Image: Gigrin Farm)Red Kites are one of the largest birds of prey in England and are notorious scavengers, swooping out of the sky and snatching their prey off the ground.

With a five foot wing span and soaring high above the land, the red kite is often confused with the Buzzard, which has been known to show up for feeding time.

They're similar in size but the Red Kite has narrower wings and a distinctive forked tail, not to mention a rich colour scheme of reds with yellow legs and a silvery white head.

They can also be spotted by listening out for their distinctive call - a thin, piping, whistling sound.

Although Gigrin Farm attracts anywhere between 20 and 400 Red Kites per feeding, their numbers are generally higher in winter as they fly elsewhere to nest during Spring.

The Raven

RavenThe largest type of crow, ravens are traditionally associated with the Tower of London, where they congregate in their hundreds.

Like the Kite, the Raven has also been persecuted and thought of as a pest, although at one time it was protected for its uses in clearing dead animals from Britain's towns.

Today it is protected by law and numbers are beginning to improve, with the highest breeding density in Europe currently present in Central Wales.

Another similarity to the Red Kite is its favourite food - carrion, the dead or rotting flesh of any small animal - which is plentiful in winter when a large population of smaller birds and animals die due to the cold.

Throughout the ages Ravens have been regarded as a symbol of evil and death, which inspired Charles Dickens, who kept two as pets, to include Grip the raven as a character in his famous novel, Barnaby Rudge.

The Raven can be spotted in a number of ways, particularly its dramatic aerial flight and unusual call, which was once regarded as a omen of imminent death.

And although the Raven looks black from a distance, close up it is possible to see flashes of purple, green and blue in its glossy plumage.

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