Only the Lonely
Somewhere in the world of wildlife there must be a publication ("Fur and Feather" perhaps?) which lists gardens suitable as a place of refuge. Mine is certainly one of them. In the last three years I've hosted an elderly fox, a stranded herring gull and a bereaved wood pigeon(it's mate was killed in front of my eyes by a large cat). Now I appear to have another solitary pigeon (of the street variety) moping around. I took a second photo of it for Eye Contact in A Year With My Camera and realised how difficult it is to get eye contact from a pigeon. They tend to look away on the assumption that if they can't see you then you aren't really there. A strategy that human beans are also inclined to adopt.
Later- Having looked at the photo in Large I see the pigeon has a marker on its leg. Did it go AWOL? Perhaps it's moping because it knows it will be punished if it goes home. I think pigeon fanciers wring the necks of birds that wander off course.
Still later - Mr Google advises it is a racing pigeon, should be fed and watered and identified by the details clipped to its wing. Hmm.
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