Ciconia ciconia may be a very common sight for those who live in Africa or on mainland Europe but for us Brits living on that island called the United Kingdom the White Stork is something to behold. It is a rare sight in the United Kingdom now, but I suspect nearly everyone recognises it because of the many myths and folktales about Storks. Which probably explains why you will spot us all taking photographs of them when we see them on their nests on top of chimneys or soaring above us on a thermal. After three years of regular stays in Olhão I still cannot resist taking a photograph of them!
Occasionally it will be the noise of them that attracts you before a sighting; bill-clattering. They make this incredible noise by opening and closing their bills rapidly, which they then seem to amplify in their throats as they move their heads to and fro.
Most guides I have read advise that they fly south for the Winter to Africa, we however have seen them year round in the Algarve a behavioural trait which would appear to have developed in the past 20years or so.
I was not surprised to learn that their nests are full of mites, they use the same nests year after year just updating it with a few sticks. Some nests have been there for decades, if not longer. If you look carefully at the larger nests you will notice they are also home to many sparrows. I am guessing that the sparrows nest out of beak reach though as they are the perfect size for a Stork meal.
As well as small birds, Storks eat beetles, grasshoppers, earthworms, mammals, frogs, fish and crustaceans. They usually forage not far from their nests.
I’m not the only one who thinks they are wonderful, check out this poem Ciconia Ciconia by Michael Waters.