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Cheeky crows steal golf balls 01.12.09

by Linda McGrory

GREENCASTLE Golf Club members are not enjoying their birdies these days as a band of cheeky crows swoop down and steal their golf balls.
Players are getting increasingly fed up with the antics of the feathered thieves who are targeting the 18-hole links course on an almost daily basis.
One player, Phonsie McCole, who has been a club member for nearly 20 years, yesterday said he and his partner have had golf balls pinched on a number of occasions.
"The problem seems to be getting worse with the crows. I'm hearing more and more players say they're getting balls lifted.
"I had a ball lifted by a crow last Saturday on the 4th hole and my partner had one lifted on the 7th. Last year, the same partner found a nest in the rough with around 400 golf balls lying in a heap on the ground. It was incredible," he said.
The bandit crows are creating a headache for golf club manager Billy McCaul who says matchplay results are being affected.
 Golfers head out for 18-holes at Greencastle yesterday hoping the bandit crows won't swoop.
"As far as I'm aware, the crows are lifting the balls pretty much all across the course but it seems to have got a lot worse in the last five or six weeks and we're not sure why. Matchplay results are being affected because people are finding their balls missing when they go to play them," he said.
"There's not a lot we can do about it. We'll just have to live with it," he added. The rules of golf state that if a ball in motion is accidentally deflected or stopped by any outside agency, it is deemed a 'rub of the green'. There is no penalty and the ball must be played from where it originally lay. If the ball is not immediately recoverable, another ball may be substituted.
Birdwatch Ireland development officer Niall Hatch says it is likely the brazen birds think the golf balls are tasty eggs.
"I myself have witnessed crows lifting golf balls. We're not 100% certain why they do it, but it is widely believed they think the golf balls are eggs.
"We think it is generally the younger birds that lift the balls. When they drop the balls and they don't crack like eggs and they can't eat them, they then start playing with them," he said. "Crows, including jackdaws and rooks, are highly intelligent birds and they enjoy playing with unusual objects. They’re also very strong birds and they would have no problem lifting the weight of a golf ball with their beaks," said Mr Hatch.
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