Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

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Huggies
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby Huggies » Fri Oct 07, 2011 6:14 pm

I got swooped once today on Bicentennial Rd at Boondall between Stanworth Road and the railway bridge.

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fingy
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby fingy » Fri Oct 07, 2011 9:29 pm

I got bit on the ear on Barr St Ekibin by either a butcher bird or maggie today,
he often swoops making a loud crack like sound(enough to make your ear ring)
but never drawn blood before. I hope for the birds sake it is a one off, I am
okay with him but a concerned parent may not be.
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Lewdannie
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby Lewdannie » Mon Nov 07, 2011 10:10 pm

Got swooped today in Tarragindi, tagged my ear...it's supposed to be over by early November :cry:

mcarrigg
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby mcarrigg » Tue Nov 08, 2011 1:27 am

I got hit on my way home from work 3 times, shoulder, helmet and side of neck by a maggie. Near the sports fields on Francis Rd, Bray Park.

I thought at the time it is a bit late in the season :?
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ozjolly
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby ozjolly » Tue Nov 08, 2011 10:09 am

I had one START about this time last year. I think they are the ugly ones who can't get laid early in the season, and this seems to make them angrier.

Crawf
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby Crawf » Tue Nov 08, 2011 1:02 pm

I also thought it was over but got swooped up at Tamborine on the weekend, his aim sucked anyway!

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ZepinAtor
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby ZepinAtor » Tue Nov 08, 2011 1:26 pm

ozjolly wrote:I had one START about this time last year. I think they are the ugly ones who can't get laid early in the season, and this seems to make them angrier.
bbwwwaaaahhh :lol: :lol:

We must have a few ugly ones over here as well.

My Wife & I were both swooped last week by the same bird about 2km from Samford Village near the Pony club.
Gas propulsion.......it's natural don't fight it.

Lewdannie
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby Lewdannie » Fri Nov 11, 2011 8:49 pm

I got swooped and tagged twice this week by a particularly nasty little bugger on Laura St Tarragindi on the street that links the bike path , he completely ignores pedestrians..

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notwal
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby notwal » Fri Nov 11, 2011 11:28 pm

Lewd Annie. What an intriguing name :lol:
judged, insulted, gone

Lewdannie
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby Lewdannie » Sun Sep 09, 2012 5:37 pm

Just reviving an old thread.

I have had a gutful of magpies and am not embarrassed to say they have got me running scared.
I am concerned I will swerve away from one and get collected by a car.

Is there anything that works to defend against them?
Do the "eyes" on the rear of the helmet work?
Do those plastic spikes coming out from the helmet work?
(and if so, what are they called and where do you get them?)

Keen to hear peoples thoughts

Dean

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landscapecadmonkey
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby landscapecadmonkey » Sun Sep 09, 2012 8:32 pm

Lewdannie wrote:I have had a gutful of magpies and am not embarrassed to say they have got me running scared.
until 2 weeks ago, i thought it a bit of a laugh, but after 2 direct temple hits from the SWINBURNE-SLASHER, i avoid the area completely - so know how you feel.
Lewdannie wrote:Is there anything that works to defend against them?
I think its all anecdotal and not worth relying on. If you strike an average maggie, ive found having a flashing red light mounted on the helmet effective, but that could be a completely random reaction.

Australia Post bikes have the flag which is an anti-magpie measure......BUT, that was all pre- Swinburne-Slasher for me.


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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby Kenzo » Sun Sep 09, 2012 8:45 pm

Don't swerve. Unlikely they will make contact with you and even more unlikely they'll draw blood. If they do strike, it's just your helmet... Better a little scratch than being road kill anyway.

Here's a post of mine from a few days ago in another thread:
Kenzo wrote:
gretaboy wrote:Yesterday on the way home I got swooped by a magpie, well he swooped a couple of times actually...was sort of hoping that I was going to be lucky enough to not have any dive bombers on my journey to and from work, but this bugger has decided otherwise. No getting around him, no alternative route. Looks like it is sprint training for the next couple of months for me at this point of the ride.
Oxford shared this with me and I continue to pass it on - a Red flasher light mounted to the top of your helmet - day or night - it works as a Magpie Repellant.
Something like this is great:
http://www.cateye.com/en/products/detai" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; ... /moreinfo/
I have the older model - but still has proven itself over time. Hope it works for your bird.
Works well enough for me. I got swooped last week by a bird and just tilted my helmet light to 'shine' directly into the 'direction of attack' and no further swoops.

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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby RonK » Sun Sep 09, 2012 9:50 pm

Cycle touring blog and tour journals: whispering wheels...

Wal42
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby Wal42 » Sun Sep 09, 2012 10:10 pm

Bit hard to aim & ride at the same time, maybe you can come up with a 2nd World War British Naval destroyer 'hedge hog' system for pushbikes, instead of dropping them down, fires the ball bearings up.

Or stick bird food all over your helmet, so instead of just swooping at you, they'll land on your helmet, eat & go away happy.

Or run over a brush turkey, I haven't been swooped since I cleaned up a brush turkey about a year ago, maybe the maggies are too damn scared.

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wizardhat
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby wizardhat » Mon Sep 10, 2012 3:14 pm

landscapecadmonkey wrote:If you strike an average maggie, ive found having a flashing red light mounted on the helmet effective, but that could be a completely random reaction.
This has been my experience also. I used to get swooped by a couple but the flashing red light put a stop to it.
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ZepinAtor
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby ZepinAtor » Fri Sep 14, 2012 6:51 pm

I met a pair of very friendly Magpies today & although it was tempting to give them a clip over the head I refrained & shared a bit of my lunch with them.

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What are you looking at you pointy beaked little pecker.

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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby PawPaw » Fri Sep 14, 2012 8:38 pm

Zep, they're most likely females...whose mission in life is to stuff their faces and provide for young.
The males are the a-holes, who show off to females by pegging out and defending a nesting area.

Anyone who thinks flashing red lights on the helmet works are challenged to try the tactic 3 times each at
- Swinburne or Tindale Streets beside Kedron Brook.
- Banyo Nudgee -The path connecting Childs and Earnshaw Roads, beside the footy ground.

These are the two most aggressive magpies I've encountered in the last 3 weeks, averaging 350km/week.
Maybe my helmet light wasn't bright enough.

From Wiki
"Almost all attacking birds (around 99%) are male,[83] and they are generally known to attack pedestrians at around 50 m (150 ft) from their nest, and cyclists at around 100 m (300 ft).[84] Attacks begin as the eggs hatch, increase in frequency and severity as the chicks grow, and tail off as the chicks leave the nest.[85]

These magpies may engage in an escalating series of behaviours to drive off intruders. Least threatening are alarm calls and distant swoops, where birds fly within several metres from behind and perch nearby. Next in intensity are close swoops, where a magpie will swoop in from behind or the side and audibly "snap" their beaks or even peck or bite at the face, neck, ears or eyes. More rarely, a bird may dive-bomb and strike the intruder's (usually a cyclist's) head with its chest. A magpie may rarely attack by landing on the ground in front of a person and lurching up and landing on the victim's chest and peck at the face and eyes.[86]

Magpie attacks can cause injuries, typically wounds to the head and particularly the eyes, with potential detached retinas and bacterial infections from a beak used to fossick in the ground.[87] A 13-year-old boy died from tetanus, apparently from a magpie injury, in northern New South Wales in 1946.[87] Being unexpectedly swooped while cycling is not uncommon, and can result in loss of control of the bicycle, which may cause injury.[88][89] In Ipswich, a 12-year-old boy was killed in traffic while trying to evade a swooping magpie on 16 August 2010.[90]"

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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby KonaCommuter » Fri Sep 14, 2012 10:05 pm


Magpie attacks can cause injuries, typically wounds to the head and particularly the eyes, with potential detached retinas and bacterial infections from a beak used to fossick in the ground.[87] A 13-year-old boy died from tetanus, apparently from a magpie injury, in northern New South Wales in 1946.[87] Being unexpectedly swooped while cycling is not uncommon, and can result in loss of control of the bicycle, which may cause injury.[88][89] In Ipswich, a 12-year-old boy was killed in traffic while trying to evade a swooping magpie on 16 August 2010.[90]"


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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby RonK » Sat Sep 15, 2012 3:26 pm

So I encountered an persistent but not overly-aggressive magpie (he didn't make contact) this morning on Nudgee Road at the (Hendra?) pony club grounds.

This location is only a couple of hundred metres from the intersection of Nudgee and Toombul, where a particularly vicious bird regularly attacked rider's eyes a couple of years ago. I hope this isn't the same bird found his way back from wherever he was relocated to.
Last edited by RonK on Sat Sep 15, 2012 4:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby PawPaw » Sat Sep 15, 2012 4:24 pm

RonK wrote:This location is only a couple of hundred metres from the intersection of Nudgee and Toobul, where a particularly vicious bird regularly attacked rider's eyes a couple of years ago. I hope this isn't the same bird found his way back from wherever he was relocated to.
Thanks Ron. I traveled north on Nudgee Rd from Portside around lunch but turned down onto Schultz Canal bike path.
The KBB Gordon Park maggie wasn't as aggressive this morning around 730a, and I covered 90 k's around the burbs without getting whacked.

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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby harro12 » Mon Oct 08, 2012 10:35 am

gordy wrote:
marinmomma wrote:
clarinetcola wrote:The one at the bikeway entrance next to the logan road freeway on ramp is a bitch. Every morning..... sit up - duck down, sit up - duck down. SWOOSH CLANK - didn't see that one coming. Strangely enough I haven't seen it in the last few weeks. Anybody know what it's up to?

I haven't used the V1 for a couple of weeks, I've been taking my chances with the nutter on Logan Rd out the front of Officeworks...the one at the end of the V1 started early, I got swooped by it in mid-July...it might have packed it in for this year and taken off on holidays until 2011 :)
I have not seen the magpie at the end of the v1 at Logan rd for a couple of weeks. I did notice a sizable blood stain on the concrete and wonder if the council have removed this bird. This bird is one of the ones that goes all year round.
Got swooped by this fella yesterday, quite persistent (7/10/12)

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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby tergal » Wed Dec 05, 2012 2:10 pm

Hi,

Magpies i can handle, Down near Holmview there is a crow who seems to think he is a magpie . He swoops people every year, and when he hits your helmet you know about it :(


Zip ties don't bother him. Nasty bugger of a bird .


o/

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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby ksharp » Sun Apr 27, 2014 2:56 pm

Vaeske comments include a concern about translocating or culling the adult Magpie pests leaves their babies vulnerable to starvation. Ive heard this line of 'misthought' before. You either translocate all the pests, including the babies, at least 80km away, or cull the lot. There is no other way, unless someone knows of one.

On transport corridors, human safety must come first. The loss of an eye, a serious injury (or in extremely rare cases, a death as a result of falling into the path of a vehicle caused by a swooping attack) is a far greater cost to society than the loss of one or a few magpie pests. I live in NE Victoria. Here Magpies have reached plague proportions. There are several thousand Magpies within a 10km radius of my home. Culling 5-10 really aggressive specimens who nest year after year alongside routes frequently used by cyclists, will not harm the overall numbers of the pests.

The Magpie pests also kill other birdlife, and peck their eyes out, Ive seen them doing it, several times. When these pests move in, all other smaller species of birds move out.

So write to your Council if the swooping is aggressive, but not just for any swoop, as some birds are not overly aggressive and just clack their beaks. Then the Council may realise the scale of the problem-because most 'bum-sitters' in offices will only get swooped once in their lives, they are not subject to repeated swoops as regular cyclists are if there are no practical alternative routes to use. Write to your Councillors, MP, Newspaper, and Federal Minister of the Environment. Check your local statutes to see if a bird can be culled or removed under State regulatory provisions. South Australia has oneunder Section 54 of the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972. Victoria may also have a provision under Section 28A and 28G of their Wildlife Act 1975. Victoria's Local Government Act, Schedule 10, part 11(b) also speaks of a duty to remove a danger to anyone or anything using a road.

I cannot guarantee citing this legislation will work, and I am not a lawyer. I am unsure if a Council is legally liable to a charge of negligence if a risk in a road corridor is reported and their is not a satisfactory response in accordance with the Road Management Act 2004 (applicable in Victoria).

I also note, that as regular cyclists, we do have to put up with some swooping, not all swoopers are in highly frequented locations, and not all are overly aggressive. However the frequency of swooping, and the numbers of swooping sites, and overall numbers of the pests is just out of control.

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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby danchez » Sat Sep 05, 2015 9:33 pm

Old thread but this might be useful for some.

http://www.magpiealert.com/SwoopingMagpieMapQLD.php" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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foo on patrol
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Re: Swooping Magpies - Brisbane

Postby foo on patrol » Sun Sep 06, 2015 5:59 am

Thanks for that, Danchez, I shall have a closer look at it after my ride. 8)

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