9.9 C
London
Sunday, May 10, 2026

Peacock terrorises town: Families living in fear of feathered thug

  • Has YOUR life been made a misery by birds? Email Sam.Lawley@mailonline.co.uk 

A peaceful market town is being terrorised by an antisocial thug tearing apart vegetable patches and waking up the neighbourhood at the crack of dawn with ear-splitting noise.

The perpetrator, a peacock handed the name of Percy by the locals it targets, first makes itself known at 4.30am each day with a mating call heard for miles.

The lovesick bird then moves on to devouring meticulously planted lettuces and courgettes, occasionally tucking into some runner beans on the side.

Hazel Harvey, 67, has been particularly exposed to Percy’s prattling, with her roof in Marlborough, Wiltshire one of the peacock’s favoured vantage points.

The retired accountant said: ‘It walks along our roof and starts calling at around half past five in the morning, which is not the sort of time that I really want to be woken up at.

‘I have been told it is an adolescent male and that the sound is a mating call. But the mating season ended at the end of June.

‘It doesn’t have a hope in hell of finding a mate – its tail feathers are very tatty.’

Peter and Carolyn Nicholls, 78 and 75, recalled finding Percy making himself comfortable in their garden when they got back from holiday.

A peaceful market town is being terrorised by an antisocial thug tearing apart vegetable patches and waking up the neighbourhood - his name is Percy the peacock (pictured)

The bird, pictured on a local's roof, first makes itself known at 4.30am each day with a mating call heard for miles

Carolyn, a retired nurse, said: ‘It acted like it owned the place. I found little peck marks on our courgettes.

‘We sort of shooed it away but then it just went up on the roof.’

Mr Nicholls added: ‘It must have come from somewhere. Either somebody kept it as a pet or there must be some sort of specialist living nearby.’

Eric Gilbert, 83, a retired headteacher born and raised in the area, said he had seen the peacock eating his beloved hand-grown vegetables.

‘I saw it biting into my runner beans. I was at my bedroom window and saw it standing in the middle of my lettuce patch. It had decided to have a different menu for breakfast I think.’

He added: ‘Another time, it buried itself in my lettuce patch, working itself down into the soil, presumably to look after its feathers or to keep itself cool.

‘When I went up to it, it fluffed up its feathers and ran in circles – going a bit berserk.’

Brendan Palmer, 54, a teacher from Somerset, said he had grown fond of the bird, particularly his ‘cheeky’ personality.

The lovesick bird then descends from the rooftops and moves on to devouring meticulously planted lettuces and courgettes, occasionally tucking into some runner beans on the side

Hazel Harvey, pictured, has been particularly exposed to Percy's prattling, with her roof in Marlborough, Wiltshire one of the peacock's favoured vantage points

‘His early routine suits me just fine,’ he admitted. ‘I get up early to do weights in the morning at around 4.30am.

‘He’s my workout alarm. If I hear him crow before I get started, I know I’m running late.

‘Percy is a bird with a serious sense of routine. He comes out of that big tree and goes on to next door’s roof to crow at 4.30am and 9.30pm. Always exactly the same.

‘The only thing is he winds up our dogs, Maggie and Luna when he goes on our back lawn and our front lawn. My dog Luna wants to eat him.’

Alfie Game, 71, a retired botanist, has also had Percy perching on his roof and described how the peacock almost got stuck on his solar panels when reciting his signature mating call.

‘I don’t want him up there because he rolls around trying to wrestle his way out,’ he said. 

‘If you chase him around he just looks at you with this astonished expression. I once shooed him away from my garden and he went back up like a balloon onto my roof.

‘He screams for about 20 minutes in the hope that a lady peacock will hear him. 

Brendan Palmer, pictured, a teacher from Somerset, said he had grown fond of the bird, particularly his 'cheeky' personality

His dog Luna is far from a fan of the feathered fiend and 'wants to eat him'

‘But you would have thought that by now he would have realised that there aren’t any other peacocks in Marlborough.’

Peacocks were first introduced to the UK in the 14th century when aristocrat Sir John de Foxley brought a couple back from the Holy Land, according to Peacocks UK.

Native to India and Sri Lanka, they have long been kept as status symbols in Britain with many arriving as gifts from foreign rulers.

They became more widely available by the 1600s after a spell of being bred in captivity and remain popular today. 

Advertisement

Hot this week

Diana’s ex-hairdresser condemns ‘evil’ comments about Kate’s hair

Princess Diana's former hairdresser has condemned 'nasty' comments made about the Princess of Wales 's hair - as she stepped out with her newly blonde tresses.

The unusual breakfast request Princess Lilibet asks Meghan Markle for

Meghan Markle revealed her children's favourite meals and that she 'doesn't like baking' on the second season of her lifestyle show With Love, Meghan.

Experts reveal how many tins of tuna is safe to eat a week

The NHS advises people to eat at least two portions of fish a week, yet a recent investigation revealed toxic metals, including mercury, could be lurking in cans of tinned tuna sold in the UK.

Some people DO see ghosts – and medics say there’s an explanation

An astonishing third of people in the UK and almost half of Americans say they believe in ghosts, spirits and other types of paranormal activity.

Prince Philip’s nickname only his nearest and dearest could call him

From 'Lillibet' to 'Grandpa Wales', members of the Royal Family are known to go by many nicknames.

Five things Arne Slot must do to fix Liverpool

LEWIS STEELE: The people who matter - owners Fenway Sports Group, sporting director Richard Hughes and others in the top brass - believe Slot is the man, even if fans disagree.

ANDREW NEIL: Why the Union WILL endure, despite election results

With the nationalists emerging as the largest party in Wales for the first time ever, all three devolved parliaments in Edinburgh, Belfast and now Cardiff are in the grip of separatists

SARAH VINE: Solve illegal immigration – or face political oblivion

Local elections are the political equivalent of Year 6 SATs. They don't necessarily determine the final outcome, but they offer a good indication of how things are going.

‘Chilling boasts’ of the chief Madeleine suspect Christian Brueckner

Drifting around Kiel, Christian Brueckner was in a belligerent mood last week, sneering at claims he might be extradited to the UK and made to answer questions about Madeleine McCann.

How BEN GILES became the go-to expert for cleaning grisly crime scenes

'We clean anything' - that's what our advert said. I sent it to undertakers, police and housing associations... and two days later, we got a call-out to our first corpse.

Duncan James reveals his boyfriend is moving in with him and his mum

The Blue singer, 48, is dating Alexander Roque, a performer with strip show Forbidden Nights.

Wolves circle around Starmer amid fallout from election disaster: Live

The Prime Minister today vowed to stay in his role for another eight years, insisting he is at the beginning of a '10-year-project of renewal'.

AI isn’t a threat to actors with real talent says Larry Lamb

In recent years, Hollywood has been left uneasy by the rise in artificial intelligence, with the industry brought to a standstill in 2023 when strikes were held.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

spot_imgspot_img