London simply did not do sea gulls*. Until the 1890s, glimpsing a gull in London was something to write home about. Indeed, it was something to write to the editor of the Evening Standard about ...
This is the common and familiar “sea­gull” across much of North America—from coastal beaches to malls in the middle of the continent—yet it is rarely seen offshore. This notably adaptable ...
Warnings have been issued reminding people not to feed the gull population in the Channel Islands, after a spate of dive-bombing incidents. Cafe goers in Guernsey and Jersey are among those being ...
I associate gulls with massive bodies of water, Great Lakes or the ocean," Bill Lindeke writes in MinnPost today. "Instead, here they are cawing and circling around an abandoned beige 80,000 ...
The most widespread pink-legged gull in North America, the herring is common in the east and mainly a winter visitor in the west. Hybrids can be locally common (mainly in the wescat). Polytypic.
Aberdeen City Council receives almost 200 complaints and enquiries each year concerning gulls, most of these concern nuisance from aggressive behaviour, noise and damage to buildings. These occur ...
Humpback Highway West, Shark Bay off-ramp. We’re stalled in a cetacean traffic jam. Two juvenile whales are doing loops ...
squares and beach (Malmö enjoys a milder climate than its more famous city-break spots to the north), taking in this laid-back city to a soundtrack of cawing gulls and bicycle bells. Read more on ...
but they earn their place here – as natural-seeming as the lorikeets cawing on “Fireball Whisky”. That said, if you think they sound like something out of a self-help book, you’d be right.