It is late morning in early March and I am standing high on a ridge, overlooking a sweep of dark green Sitka spruce forest, stitched through with swathes of larch, still clothed in their gingery winter needles. The early spring sun is beginning to take the chill from the air and a couple of local buzzards are calling from the trees below.
Watching the grey ghost
Suddenly, a flurry of woodpigeons explodes from the treetops. My eye is drawn to the grey and white form of a female goshawk, cutting across the canopy with effortless authority. She exudes power and control, holding her tail tightly closed and fluffing out her snow-white undertail coverts like a pom-pom. She flaps on stiff wings up into the early spring sky and begins to circle, wide and deliberate over her breeding territory, a clear message to any other female that this is her patch. Right on cue, a smaller bird, still strong in stature, powers up out of the forest to meet her. The two spiral up into the clouds, before the male, unable to contain himself, breaks away and performs a series of impressive switchbacks across the valley, flying rapidly down before closing his wings and shooting up vertically into the clear sky. Performance over, he dives back into the forest, landing near the unseen nest. I feel like applauding!
Goshawks, known evocatively as the ‘grey ghost’, are one of our most secretive and enigmatic raptors. For much of the year they melt into the forest, rarely seen, but in late winter and early spring they give themselves away through spectacular aerial displays. Any large tracts of forest – they particularly like commercial plantations – can host goshawks; find a vantage point with a clear view of the skyline and, ideally, with the sun behind you. A clear day, with sunny spells and breeze is best and most display occurs from mid to late morning. In cold, overcast conditions, display can still occur, but it is less intense. If it is raining, stay at home!
By April, the female will be settled on her eggs, display stops and the birds become very hard to spot. The female is entirely reliant on her mate to feed her while she incubates, which explains why these early-season displays matter so much. She is not only defending a territory rich in food and safe nest sites, but also guarding her partner. Males are valuable assets and females are known to fight – and even kill – rivals to secure them. This is serious business and aerial chases and battles can be intense.