It sounds like the ideal job - the chance to sit down, read a book and perhaps idly strum a ukulele. But Bangor University graduate Jamie Fox has to do it in all weathers, as a human scarecrow in a field in Norfolk. Mr Fox, 22, has been employed to scare partridges from a field of oilseed rape at Aylsham because conventional birdscarers have not worked. As well as wearing a bright orange coat, Mr Fox uses an accordion and a cowbell to frighten the birds.
Mr Fox, who graduated in the summer with a degree in music and English, earns about £250 a week scaring the partridges from the 10-acre (four-hectare) field. "The farmer said to me, 'Bring a deckchair and a good book'," said Mr Fox, who hopes to find a job in music and is learning to play the ukulele during quiet moments in the field. "I get to sit and read for a lot of the time but whenever I see the partridges, I have to get up and scare them off," he said.
"I ring a cowbell and I've even played the accordion, but the ukulele doesn't seem to have any effect on them." Mr Fox, of Aylsham, hopes to travel to New Zealand next year and is saving to pay for the trip. "It's not a bad job. I've read some books and listened to a few podcasts," he said. "A couple of my friends in busier, more generously-paid jobs, are slightly envious.
"It's nice to be out in the fresh air, although it gets very cold when the wind whips across the field and I've had to shelter in a wood when it's rained." Farmer William Youngs said he decided to employ a human birdscarer after other methods failed to stop the birds eating the young rape shoots. "Partridges love rape - it's like fillet steak to them," said Mr Youngs. He said Mr Fox was proving a very effective deterrent. "Jamie's doing a good job. You can really see the difference," he said.
1 comment:
Being a human scarecrow isn’t exactly a graduate job that I would fancy, sitting out in the cold and rainy weather scaring away birds in farmers fields all day doesn’t seem very rewarding having studied hard for three years at University. I can’t imagine this is what he had in mind after graduating from University but I don’t suppose that being unemployed is what he would have wanted either. Maybe it doesn’t qualify as career progression but it has to be better than being bored. It’s like Jamie Fox said "It's not a bad job I've read some books and listened to a few podcasts”.
Okay, it’s not the ideal career opportunity at least Jamie does have a job, unlike most graduates out there. A lot of us graduates would be happy to do almost anything to earn some money and be busy having finished University and moved back home. In this climate of unemployment it seems that having a job is better than not regardless of what it is. Beggars can’t be choosers!
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