Well bloody hell isn’t it always the way with these damn birds. By nailing the new claimants to our home territory, I’ve opened the floodgates again. As I drove out first thing this morning there was a cacophony of squabbling magpies flying around all over, as the two remaining birds from the shot-up mob yesterday were invaded by their neighbours from over the way. The other mob was eight or nine birds strong and they were going hard out on these two birds with a view to claiming the pines.
Luckily when I got back this arvo I noted straight away that the boss bird from yesterday with the new distinctive call was actually still alive, I thought I got him yesterday, so I was able to get a pretty good recording of his call. I nipped inside, edited the sound file and took it back out and played it to him on the Bluetooth speaker… Now that got him very instantly really excited.
I had to wait for ages for a clear shot as this canny bird has been hiding inside the pines rather than perching on the outside in a clear LOS. He’s known something is not quite right, but today he made his fatal mistake and showed his belly in a small gap. I drilled him slightly lower in the body than intended, as he fell through the branches he squawked loudly in a highly distressed manner before carking it. This had the immediate effect of bringing in his sole surviving buddy, and all the invaders…
When a new mob of magpies has never been shot at before, and they’ve not encountered the caller, it’s real mayhem. They haven’t got a clue what’s going on as their mates fall out of the tree. They take off at the shot but loop straight back round and take another perch as they squawk WTF??? Sometimes young birds won’t take off at all and stay rooted to the spot. Big mistake. The dead quiet suppressed .22 subs help a lot. I made a pretty reasonable dent in the new mob before the survivors finally worked out there was something very very bad happening, and went and perched on the territory boundary wondering what the hell it was. I’m pretty confident I’ll be into them first thing in the morning as they will not be able to resist exploring any new territorial opportunities.
Very nearly fucked up though because our resident pet kereru was in the pines when all the action went down and I damn near shot him / her. Got a glint of colour just at the critical moment. I would have had my arse kicked big time if I’d shot that bird… It does amaze me that it just flies out of the pines and straight into the little stand of natives directly behind where I’m shooting from, onto its normal perch. It’s probably only 4m away from me as I’m blitzing away. I think he quite likes watching what’s going on. Probably farkin’ hates ‘pies.
If anyone would like a copy of the latest recorded call (and all the rest) just let me know, PM me your email and I’ll add you to the shared folder on Google Drive and you can download them. I’ve had some guys from the Forum let me know that the calls have totally revolutionised their magpie shooting which is cool. Use them on a decent Bluetooth speaker with a bit of volume and you will be amazed at how quickly birds will come in. Just remember that once they start to associate the calls with dying, it will become harder to attract them, so don’t over use the caller.
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