Tragedy or mystery?
August 19, 2009 by Bird
Filed under Blog, Fauna, Summer, Wild London
In June I wrote about this Mute Swan who was stoically sitting on its nest all alone despite obviously suffering badly in the blistering heat. I never saw another bird with it, and as Mute Swans take turns with looking after the nest and chicks it seemed obvious to me that this bird might be in trouble. Well sadly it appears that either its mate died shortly after the eggs were laid leaving it unable to cope and causing the eggs to fail, or it is a female who built her nest alone and laid infertile eggs, because early this month I cycled past to find this…
An abandoned nest with only two cracked eggs in it. The determined swan had sat tight on its nest for two whole months to my knowledge, which cancels out the hope that the majority of the eggs might have hatched and the family swum away – swans eggs take approximately 35 days to hatch. The bird was sitting way too long.
But then again… I certainly wasn’t able to keep watch on this nest every single day and I could be wrong - there might have been another bird and I just never happened to see it – I could also have overestimated the time the swan was sitting. It’s not like I was taking notes. I did ask every single person I saw looking at the swan if they had ever noticed another swan or how long they thought the swan had been sitting and invariably got the replies “nope” and “ooooh, ages“, which isn’t exactly scientific. I guess I will never know.
Whatever actually happened, the disappearance of the swan has been of benefit to its neighbours. Earlier in the year when it was building its nest, I’d watched it driving off moorhens and coots who had already started building and were understandably loath to abandon their nests just because a bigger bird wanted them out. Of course the swan won, but the smaller birds who had been nesting in this location for years didn’t go far. While I was looking at the huge abandoned nest a peaceful family of moorhens picked over it, selecting choice twigs and branches for use in their own construction.
I don’t know if there are many Londoners local to the area reading here but I was wondering… is there anyone out there who knows what happened to the Coppermill Lane swan? So many people stopped to look at it every day, it became locally quite famous. Not sure where I mean? It was on the western end of Coppermill lane (E17) near Springfield Park. It’s a very long shot I know but is there anyone out there who can help solve the mystery?
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Hello there I saw the swan I think it is the same one you mean, I go past it on the way to work. It did seem to be sitting there all on its own and I never saw another swan with it. I hope it is ok, I have not seen it in a long while now, it really is a shame as I was looking forward to seeing the babies. I hope this helps
Hi Julie, thank you for visiting… and WOW that was fast, I didn’t really expect any answers at all so I’m really impressed! If you don’t mind me asking, how did you find my blog – do you already read it?
So you never saw more than one swan either. Hmmm. I’m fairly sure it was all on it’s own too. Thank you so much for commenting.
Yeah, nature’s not all sweetness & light, although many people would like it to be. Such things are always a bit of a bummer, but c’est la vie. Thanks for the update, regardless.
It’s true Lana, nature is pretty ruthless. I’m fairly sure I know what happened here but I’d still love to know for certain.
You may never know Bird..so many things happen and most go unnoticed by humans. It is a curiosity isn’t it and you can’t help feel sorry for the swan…
It’s true, I’d be surprised if I ever find out anything more. I certainly did feel sorry for the swan, though it was a bit of a bully with the smaller birds. I’ll be interested to see if any swans try to nest there again next year.