Does it have to be a herring gull?
Given the low take-up, I'm prepared to relax the criteria. But it needs to be a ****-off big aggressive type, not some dainty kittiwake thing. Top marks for a Great Black-Backed.
Does it have to be a herring gull?
Gullcentric competitions are obviously just a Swansea based recreation tc.
I'm afraid the best I can muster here, at short notice, is a wagtail.
Gannet?Given the low take-up, I'm prepared to relax the criteria. But it needs to be a ****-off big aggressive type, not some dainty kittiwake thing. Top marks for a Great Black-Backed.
I've carried several chickens and a goose, but not all at the same time. And they were all a bit dead, so I suppose that doesn't count.![]()
Gannet?
I now have this picture in my mind, of TC taking on a full-grown gannet (better still: a breeding female sitting on eggs)
Which reminds me: someone mentioned "Albatross!". I remember with some amusement, when a passenger on the Newhaven-Dieppe ferry (I think) accosted me and asked "do we get albatrosses in the English Channel?". Alas, no. What he'd seen were gannets. But they're splendid birds to watch, especially when they oblige you with a dive at close quarters...
'fraid its just my fertile imagination! What are you on about, Claud? I tried googling* 'competitive gull' but got no hits. Are we on some sort of weird animal rescue thingy? Are you closet RSPCA-in-disguise?Pete - it's chapeau time if you've actually carried a Gannet on a bike - I'll even lower the distance requirements to a mere 200 yards. Or is this just big talk?
Unfortunate cropping means you can't see that Hitch is riding a unicycle here. But I think he's got you beaten by some measure, tc.
Unfortunate cropping means you can't see that Hitch is riding a unicycle here. But I think he's got you beaten by some measure, tc.
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You'll all be pleased to hear that seagull attacks are a commonplace at the Madeira. As in Seagull pecks your head until you throw your chips up in the air. (Could be another helmet thread in the making).