A sociable pheasant has become a fixture on a Derbyshire
golf course.
Rory - named after world number two Rory McIlroy - has made himself a favourite with the club's staff. He arrives at the club house every morning to share the green keeper's breakfast.
Photo from here.
The male pheasant appeared on the greens at Ashbourne Golf Club six weeks
ago, watching golfers as they tee off, pecking at their shoes and sharing toast with the green-keeper. "He follows people around the course and hangs around the clubhouse. He's
getting more and more adventurous," said club manager Andrew Smith.
"Some of the golfers think he's making a nuisance of himself
but others see him as a tame little pet." Mr Smith said one member had become so irritated with the bird, he had fended
him off with a dustbin lid, like a gladiator. But the experience did not put
Rory off. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) said Rory's sociable behaviour was unusual.
YouTube link.
Val Osborne, head of wildlife inquiries at the RSPB, said: "I have never heard of a golfing pheasant before. Occasionally we hear of males getting quite aggressive. But for one to be quite tame and not too much of a pest to the golfers is
quite unusual." She added it was likely Rory had a mate near the course who was sitting on
her eggs at the moment. "At this time of year, the males don't have that much to do," she said. "Maybe that's why he's taken up golf."
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