21 Feb 2008 02:01:56 | Chris P Bohn
It's 4.41 a.m. and I am listening to the birds singing in the
nearby park. Few people hearing the Dawn Chorus could guess at
how highly organised and politically motivated birds have become
over the past few years. . .
It all started with a campaign by owls to secure extended rights
for night workers, including enhanced rates of pay, regular meal
breaks and assurances that they would not be penalized for
refusing to work overtime. Some employers tried to get owls in
trouble in certain parts of the country. They did this by
contacting their local branches of the Health and Safety
Department and complaining about the owls' unsavoury habit of
regurgitating their food where it could be likely to cause
contamination. But after a long court battle the owls won on a
technicality.
Union activity has become increasingly important for birds. A
landmark ruling has seen a Bill of Rights for chickens and
turkeys become law in England and Wales. This will ensure
enforcement of
1) The right to be anaesthetised (or preferably deceased) when
plucked and 2) The right to be cooked at the correct temperature
as well as the more controversial 3) Right not to be covered in
grease and sold in truckers' cafés.
Pigeons have been keen union activists for a long time. Six
years ago they broke away from the birds' Musicians Union
claiming that other birds (and approximately 90% of humans) were
discriminating against them. Things came to a head after a
series of complaints about pigeons' monotonous calls (we are not
allowed to refer to these calls as birdsong as this has been
outlawed under an adaptation of the human "Trades Descriptions
Act"). Larks and warblers and others calling themselves "proper"
songbirds managed to put together a large petition calling into
question pigeons' status as musicians and insisting that their
rights and privileges be renegotiated. The "proper" songbirds
described pigeons' calls as "nothing more than cheap and
repetitive sampling which contributes nothing to the music
industry . . ."
Seagulls are being seen in greater numbers these days in some of
our more inland towns and cities. This is because, due to the
dramatic fall in fish stocks in the North Sea, many seagulls
have been decommissioned. The gulls who have remained in the
industry have found their activities severely curtailed. A major
contributory factor to the gulls' problems has been unfair
competition from human fishing "trawlers" which are equipped to
handle vast quantities of raw fish. A spokesman for the Seabird
Federation said:
"We have passed the point of no return. Young birds have seen
the problems their parents have had to face. They have decided
not to go into fishing. It's very sad. They just spend all day
walking round town centres eating out of discarded fish and chip
wrappers. . ."
There is an organization in Britain called the RSPB (Royal
Society for the Protection of Birds) which is the political wing
of the NDBLA (National Dickie Bird Liberation Army). For a long
time there has been controversy over where the money goes from
the RSPB. Many suspect that some of it has been funding
terrorist operations by militant pigeons. Older readers may
recall the start of a long-running pigeon sponsored campaign
involving defecating on cars which had just been washed. Small
garden bird splinter groups were later formed and these groups
attacked domestic washing lines, causing havoc in inner city
areas.
A sinister development occurred in the summer of 1976 when the
previously easygoing insect fraternity became involved in the
birds' campaign in mainland Britain. The flying insect lobby
organised suicide missions, aiming (and maiming) themselves at
car windscreens. Readers may remember seeing picketing by
thousands of ladybirds during that notable hot summer,
especially at seaside resorts, where the Seabird Federation was
still in its infancy...
Cuckoos have been getting themselves a bad name in bird union
circles for many years. And it appears to be thoroughly well
deserved by all accounts. Cuckoos, the pariahs of the bird
community, have been closely associated in many bird brains,
with the human British Horological Institute, where they signed
a deal to accept free indoor housing in exchange for agreeing to
tell the time for their landlords every hour on the hour.
Mainstream bird groups saw this as "selling out" and banned
cuckoos from membership of several important bird institutions.
Normally mild-mannered blackbirds started what became known as
the "Every hour on the hour" campaign, which aimed to throw a
cuckoo's egg out of a nest every hour of the day. This was an
extension of the backlash against cuckoos which had originally
begun in 1831 with the advent of the campaign against the Cuckoo
Squatters Movement. The CSM itself had begun as a protest
movement after cuckoos had been refused free crèche facilities
by pigeons. This was unfair treatment against the cuckoos, but
few remember the details nowadays; cuckoos were effectively
sidelined from that day on, and the situation - and with it,
cuckoos' reputation - has spiralled out of control ever since.
As a result of their previous unfair treatment by other birds,
cuckoos have, since 2001, opted for devolution, allowing them to
set their own agenda. Hopefully this will result in productive
high-level talks which should eventually see an end to the
strike-breaking activities of cuckoos which has got them into
even more trouble in more recent years.
But not all birds are members of unions. Mallard ducks, who make
up a large proportion of the waterborne Home Guard militia, have
vowed never to jeopardise the security of our inland waterways
by opting for the right to form unions and thus for the
possibility of strike action. They have instead accepted a ten
year pay and conditions package giving them sole rights on or
within fifty metres of any body or stretch of water in the
United Kingdom and any of its dependent territories. It is a
little known fact that swans are part of the Home Guard and may
therefore class themselves as honorary ducks.
And that leaves us firstly with swallows, swifts and other
summer visitors from warmer climes. As these are not strictly
speaking domestic birds they are not subject to the same rules
as other birds, although international conventions do
nevertheless apply.
And finally with budgerigars, canaries and the rest of our
overcrowded prison population. Their case is complicated. On the
one hand some have been freed by NDBLA pigeons. But others are
not convinced by the plight of the budgies. As one cuckoo said,
preferring to remain anonymous:
"They may be in long-term confinement, but they've all got
colour TV's. And that's something a lot of us wouldn't mind
swapping places for . . ."
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Article writer, baking enthusiast, chaos magician, self-styled
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