Tour Scotland Travel Video Seagulls Attacking And Mobbing Heron The Lade Perth Perthshire



Tour Scotland travel video seagulls attacking and mobbing a Heron at The Lade on ancestry visit to Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. Mobbing is a noisy, obvious form of behaviour that birds engage in to defend themselves or their offspring from perceived danger. When danger is discovered, the birds start to emit alarm calls and fly at the predator, diverting its attention and harassing it. Such attacks are rarely pressed home against really dangerous species, such as goshawks or crows. Scotland's oldest canal which once served as a defensive moat for Perth while also providing its mills with power, the Town Lade begins as a diversion of the River Almond 3 miles North West of the city centre. Most likely constructed around 1150, the lade leaves the right bank of the Almond between Almondbank and the Huntingtower Hotel, above a weir called Low's Work, or Lowswark. It flows east to Tulloch, where it once supported a bleachfield, then southeast to Balhousie where it throws off the Balhousie Lade which once powered a mill to the east of Balhousie Castle. The main channel continues southeast to the edge of Perth town centre, at which point it splits into two main branches. The northern branch flows alongside present-day West Mill Street and then surges under Murray Street and Mill Street before it is again visible next to George Inn Lane, while the southern branch runs under Methven Street and Canal Street. In mediaeval times these branches formed a continuous moat running just outside the town walls, with the River Tay providing protection in the east. Within the modern town centre, the lade now largely flows underground in stone-lined culverts but is best observed where it makes a brief appearance in the vicinity of the Lower City Mills. There were once corn and meal mills at Huntingtower, Ruthvenfield and Tulloch, together with the Upper and Lower City Mills in the town centre. The plentiful supply of water was also important for the wool, tanning and, later, dyeing industries which were all important to the economy of Perth.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

View the most recent Tour Scotland photographs.

No comments:

Post a Comment