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The Red Kite is a graceful bird of prey and is unmistakable with its reddish-brown body, angled wings and deeply forked tail. The red Kite was almost extinct and has now been successfully re-introduced to England and Scotland. Their diet is mainly from scavenging on carrion, scraps, and they will sometimes take small live prey. The mother will, at signs of danger call the young who will "play dead" to the extent that a fox will believe them to be dead and leave them, thinking it can return to eat them later. They nests in trees, and in winter, many kites will roost together. From a distance the nests look like rookeries, including the swirling pattern of the birds. You can see that the birds are not rooks but kites because of the more slender wings, and their forked tail. Red Kites occupy their breeding home range all year. Each nesting territory can contain up to five alternative nest sites. The nest is built high in a fork or a limb of a tree. It is made of dead twigs and lined with grass and sheep’s wool. We went to see them at Gigrin Farm, near Rhayader in Wales where between 200 and 400 kites visit per day www.gigrin.co.uk/ They are open every day, and the feeding birds come really close to you.
Number in Britain900
Conservation Status UKAmber
Status in UKResident/ Re-Introduced Breeder, Passage Visitor
Length63 cm
Wingspan185 cm
WeightM.1Kg F.1.2Kg
HabitatPasture, open woodland, forest
First Record8th Century
Egg Size57x45 mm
Egg Weight63 g
Clutch Size2 eggs
Incubation31-32 days
Fledging50-60 days
Number of broods1
Age at First Breeding2 years
Maximum Recorded Age20 years, 1 month