Thursday 7 May 2009

The Doves at Amberley Castle

We went to Amberley Castle in West Sussex for one night for our wedding anniversary in April. My own squabs, Victory and Purity, were just flying and finding food for their own so I wasn't too worried about them. I knew from their website http://www.amberleycastle.co.uk/ that Amberley had white doves and was looking forward to seeing them. (More about our visit to Amberley with my photos on my usual blog if you are interested http://faithsdoves.blogspot.com/ Although it's called 'faith's doves' it's not my dove blog!!!

We were so fortunate to have one day of gorgeous, almost summer, weather.

The castle has been a hotel for 20 years. I don't know when the doves were introduced or when the dovecote was erected, but imagine they have been there for some while, as there were a fair number of them and they all seemed mightily at home! They do use the dovecote

But also shelter and nest in the nooks and crannies of the old castle walls. You can just see one peeking out in the photo below.


Some of these holes were the places were the original beams slotted in, see below, and make ideal nesting sites for doves. I put my arm in a lower one at the front of the castle and it went in to the elbow - that's plenty of room to make a good nest! I didn't see any squabs but knew they were somewhere around as I could hear their high-pitched squeaking.






At night, the old stone wall was studded with white pom poms, and they looked so endearing, but I just couldn't get a good photo. If you click on the picture, it should enlarge and you can see three doves in the rounded wall (turret) at the side of the portcullis.

The gardens were beautiful and, for me, the pure white doves, cooing gently and fluttering about added to the loveliness. As did the white peacock

I spoke to the lady gardener who, with one other, looks after the gardens entirely alone. She said that they feed the peacock (and the peahen who was currently kept penned up as she keeps escaping) but do not feed the doves. The doves rob a bit of food from the peafowl but otherwise find their food in the nearby fields. I wondered how they got on when we had all that snow - there wouldn't have been much natural food around then! But I suppose it keeps the numbers down, as does the sparrowhawk which the gardener said was also around.

Doves on the battlements
And on the window above the portcullis


They have a truly delightful home! This was taken early in the morning before the hotel guests were around.


The end. (double clicking should enlarge the photos)

3 comments:

Calico Kate said...

Lovely pictures Faith. I loved the description of White Pompoms in their holes at night.
HAppy Anniversay

fillbrookdoves said...

hi faith
i am happy that your doves are ok i had two young ones hatch at the same date these were from my feral flock that is made up of more colourd birds than white i have too small flocks that come at differnt times of the day. i was wondering were did alll your doves start from like did you have a pair or 2 in your dovecote or someing becaus emine came from a farm thats down the road

Faith said...

Hi Fillbrookdoves, I had two pairs of white doves originally when I had my new dovecote three years ago. They had babies, and other doves seemed to 'join in'. We live on a farm and near other farms. Pigeons/doves naturally like to live together and seem to find each other. There's another farm locally where a lot of them live, but they don't feed them like I do!