• 4 months ago
A town has been invaded by an ‘apocalyptic’ swarm of up to 3,000 seagulls – despite being 30 miles from the nearest coast.

The scavenging winged terrors have flocked to a landfill site in Hyndburn, Lancs., where locals likened the scenes to tthose in Alfred Hitchcok's 1963 horror movie The Birds,

Shocking video shows the huge numbers of seagulls flocking overhead with local houses, cars and gardens now being bombarded by bird poo.

Fed-up residents say they arrive first thing in the morning and stay til late at night - with some even fearing their presence is devaluing the value of properties in the area.

Gary Hough, 62, said: “There must have been 3,000 seagulls above my house on Wednesday this week. I’ve never seen anything like it.

“The gulls are here about 7am and head towards the tip and they come in dribs and drabs but start to congregate.

"Then from 8am onwards, that’s when the majority of them come and it’s just constant until around 9.30pm.”

Gary and partner Cheryl Gouldstone, 59, have lived in their £200,000 semi for eight years, but fear the plague of birds might devalue properties in the area.

They say birds have always been attracted to the site, but since last October it has got steadily worse and the issue has been turbo-charged since April.

Operator Suez have implemented mitigation measures, such as setting of loud noises to scare the birds.

But Gary says all that does is scatter the birds overhead and cause them to drop their mess on cars, washing and driveways.

He added: “It started to become such a concern and people were saying they were getting sick of it.

"The birds that have come have now nested so they’re here to stay. They’re breeding very quickly and from April, we’ve seen them multiplying.

"I’ve never seen anything like it, all these new birds that are breeding, it’s not like they’re coming from elsewhere."

Cheryl said: “It’s like an Alfred Hitchcock film. There’s visual pollution, noise pollution and people can’t believe this is going on.

"They set off pistol-like bangs to get rid of them, but all it does is scares them off in droves.

“You can’t sit in the garden as it's covered in bird poo. They're dropping food in the gardens.

"I drive home on the motorway and I know when I’m home because I see a swarm of seagulls above the road."

Gary said he had a near miss in his car recently as another motorist was distracted by the birds.

He set up a Facebook page where locals can discuss their concerns and has organised a public meeting with landfill operators Suez and local councillors next month.

He added: "There's always been a bit of a smell and the odd bird, but it's never been like this.

"I have it on good authorities there's rats there. So depending on where you live, you either have the birds, the smell, the rats or all three."

Locals said the issue became worse last October when workers at the landfill began filling a disused quarry, which is closer to the houses in the area.

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Transcript
00:00I'm Gary Hough and I live in Accrington in Lancashire. I've lived here for eight years.
00:06We've recently been plagued with pests. By that I mean seagulls, flies.
00:12This is all coming from a local landfill site that comes under Lancashire County Council's control.
00:20The site operators, Suez, basically fill in a new cell of landfill waste
00:26and the waste comes from multiple different boroughs around Lancashire.
00:30What we've started to see is, probably since October last year,
00:35was a rise in the number of seagulls that were starting to come over the houses.
00:40The volumes of gulls has just become significant. I mean, it's just incredible.
00:48If I was to say there was 2,000 to 3,000 gulls in the air at one time,
00:53especially when they're turning over the landfill site,
00:57at its peak, when you look up into the sky above our houses, you see thousands of seagulls.
01:03The best way I can describe it is if you see one of those desert films where you see a plague of locusts
01:09that just comes swooping in, it's a sight to behold, it really is.
01:13The gulls themselves are bringing in a number of different problems.
01:16I mean, the first is bird poop. It's pooping on people's cars,
01:21they're pooping on people's homes and driveways, they're pooping on washing.
01:26You can't sit out in your garden because of the poop.
01:29They're dropping food waste. We've had chicken bones.
01:32One of the residents recently put a massive slab of meat which had hit the kitchen window
01:39and it was lying in the back garden.
01:42Now, obviously, residents have got children, you've got animals,
01:46and dropping this kind of waste is pretty distressing, as you can imagine.
01:51It's affecting people in the community in a number of ways, really.
01:54The first is when the weather's good, as it has been recently,
01:57you can't have barbecues, constantly having to wash the vehicles.
02:01We're coming into school holiday season now, children playing out is affected.
02:05Some parents can't let their children out, they're worried about the impact of the gulls.
02:09They're worried about the gulls maybe coming down and starting to attack them.
02:12The children in the playgrounds with food waste, for example, or food in their hands.
02:16We have a landfill site that is being filled with attractive food waste,
02:21and for gulls, who are now nesting in the area as a result of this and breeding in huge numbers,
02:28that food waste is accessible.
02:32And it's accessible because the site operators sewage, as far as we can see,
02:37whilst they're working to try and minimise the disruption on the residents,
02:41it's what they tell us, we can visually see that in the evenings in particular,
02:47those piles of food waste aren't being covered up.
02:51The birds are just feeding on it, and it's seven days a week.
02:54We were told by sewage, or I was told by sewage,
02:57that they believe that it's because post-Covid the gulls aren't coming inland.
03:04Well, that's nonsense.
03:06It really is, because we've lived here, let's just say, eight years,
03:09but it's all through Covid we didn't see any gull activity.
03:13During Covid, or even immediately after it, it's only this last eight months
03:18that we started to see this infestation gathering momentum.
03:22So I set up a community group on Facebook to try and co-ordinate and centralise everything
03:28to get people not only aware of the situation,
03:31but to gather people's thoughts and views and videos and photographs
03:35to really give us some sort of evidence that we can go to sewage
03:39and the Environment Agency and Lancashire County Council
03:43to clearly demonstrate that this is having a massive impact.
03:46The campaign group that I set up on Facebook is called Tips Over the Edge,
03:50and within four weeks we went from two members to just over 650 and counting.
04:01Thanks for watching!

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