More details from Mick today! Really Thank you so much for his sharing!
感謝Mick今日提供的更詳細資料!
Dear Sze,
Many thanks for getting back to me about the swallows. I'm happy for you to post my email onto the website - sadly I think there will be other bird-lovers around the territory who have also observed dead swallows so it may encourage others to come forward with information.
We noticed the first pair of swallows visiting the nest outside our office perhaps around mid-March, maybe earlier. They arrived with the first warm weather in March and were killed by the first very cold, wet spell of weather soon afterwards. We were so delighted to see them back and it was very sad that they couldn't survive the bad weather. I can't remember the date exactly, but it was the first really cold, wet spell in March.
Over Easter we noticed that many more swallows had arrived and were flying around buildings along the Yung Shue Wan shorefront. Another pair had also started visiting the nest outside our office. The numbers around in Yung Shue Wan were hard to estimate, but they seemed to be doing well until the cold, wet weather of last Wednesday and Thursday. Thursday evening we heard a lot of noise outside our office and noted three groups of swallows in Yung Shue Wan Back Street perhaps totalling 65 individuals: on the balcony to the rear of No.xx Main Street, where the nest is located (approx. 25 birds); on the balcony behind No.xx Main Street (approx. 10 birds); and on the balcony of No.xx or maybe No.xx Back Street (approx.30 birds).
I noticed one dead swallow in the doorway of No.xx Main Street on Thursday evening and was worried for the others because it was so cold and wet on Thursday night. I walked around the area near our office last Friday morning expecting the worst but found just one other dead swallow in Back Street below the rear balcony of No.xx Main Street (I informed the AFCD of the bird's location earlier this afternoon and they came and collected it today). The dead swallow outside No.xx disappeared over the weekend so maybe a cat or one of the street cleaners took it away.
As I mentioned in my email on Friday morning, there may be further casualties on the balconies where the birds were sheltering on Thursday night, but it is impossible to see from street level or from our office windows.
Best wishes,
Mick