Page 1 of 1

Seagulls

PostPosted: 01 Aug 2015, 12:35
by wendy
They look rather majestic if you watch a solitary seagull flying swiftly through the air, very high up in the sky.
But when they get together it is a different matter.
Last night, they seemed to be having a party outside my house around 3pm flying round and round, swarking and swarking.
Do you get any problems with seagulls?

Re: Seagulls

PostPosted: 01 Aug 2015, 15:04
by annie
No, Wendy we are 30 miles from the coast so don't see them here often

Re: Seagulls

PostPosted: 01 Aug 2015, 15:06
by maureenho
We are about 25-30 miles from the coast and we get loads of them making a noise and sometimes they swoop down in the garden and pinch the food we put out for the little birds.

Re: Seagulls

PostPosted: 01 Aug 2015, 16:42
by wendy
We are 30 miles from the sea and we get loads. I think they arrived when the MacDonalds came.

Re: Seagulls

PostPosted: 01 Aug 2015, 17:00
by maureenho
We've always had seagulls over, even more so in the winter, my nanny use to say it must be cold down the coast when they came inland.

Re: Seagulls

PostPosted: 01 Aug 2015, 17:02
by wendy
Where my daughter lives she is also about 30 miles from the coast and they get loads.
Lots of cities are plagued by them.

Re: Seagulls

PostPosted: 01 Aug 2015, 17:30
by Rosalind
We get the odd one or two here but luckily are not troubled by them.

Re: Seagulls

PostPosted: 01 Aug 2015, 17:36
by annie
We rarely see them

Re: Seagulls

PostPosted: 02 Aug 2015, 01:09
by Honey
We don't see many here and they cause no problems.
But I still feel peeved when I remember a big fat seagull who pinched my poached salmon sandwitch years ago in Devon when on holiday.
I had just it put it down on a wall , turned around to get the flask of tea, and he swooped and scoffed it do877