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UK albatross

Fulmars are mini albatrosses, clumsy on land, but masters of the air.

In Orkney wherever you look round the coast there are fulmars. And it’s as recently as 1901, which is comparatively recent, when the first pairs of fulmars actually bred here on Orkney. It’s got another local name and that is 'molly mock', which is very close to 'molly mawk' which happens to be another word used all around the world for albatross. And that is exactly what a fulmar is: it’s a small albatross. It shares various characteristics. It’s got the tubenose on top of the beak, which allows it to filter salt out of seawater, and it’s got a terrific smell for fish. They mate for life, and that life can be very, very long. In fact, the oldest recorded fulmar is over 50. And the other thing is that just like albatrosses on land they’re not that pretty, maybe a bit clumsy, but when they start flying they are absolute masters of the air. They can glide for ages without a flap. When they hang on the wind like this it’s like some invisible wire or maybe even some invisible elastic, it’s constantly up and down, up and down, just sway to the left, sway to the right. Normally a bird is doing something, but you watch a fulmar like this and I can’t come to any other conclusion than it’s revelling in its own powers of flight.

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