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FIVE SECRETARY BIRD.pdf
1. KENYA UTALII COLLEG
Dr. Margaret W. Mwakima
THE SECRETRARY BIRD
It might be rather scary to meet a bird as big as this walking down the street! It's body is
about three feet long, and with its long legs it stands about four feet tall. It looks like a
long-tailed, long-winged black and gray hawk with legs like a crane.
The bird got its name in the 1700's when only men worked as secretaries. That was
before the days of typewriters and even fountain pens. Quill pens, made from large
feathers, were used for writing. Men wore wigs in those days and the secretaries found
it handy to poke their pens into their wigs and let them hang down where they could get
them when needed. When the men who studied wild life saw a bird with feathers
hanging from the back of its head like the secretaries' pens, they called it the secretary
bird.
Another name for the bird is "serpent eagle." That is because it just loves snakes--for
dinner, that is. When it finds one it either kills it with a powerful forward kick or seizes it
with its claws and strikes it on the back of the neck with its beak. It may use beak, wings
and feet to kill a large snake. It uses its wings as shields to keep from being bitten. These
birds have been known to kill snakes up to four feet long but their main food is small
mammals and insects.
Secretary birds live in South Africa, so you are not likely to meet one. Some people tame
them and keep them around their houses and barnyards to get rid of snakes and other
pests. There is a law against killing them, because they are so useful as snake killers.
The secretary bird runs so fast that it is sometimes called "the devil's horse." It can run
for a long time and has a large territory that it patrols every day. It makes its home in
open grassland or in country where there are scattered bushes.
These birds are good flyers, as they should be, for they have a wingspan of seven feet!
But they have a hard time getting off the ground. They have to make a long run with
wings outspread before becoming airborne. One observer described the bird's take-off
as like that of a long-distance bomber. Perhaps that is why they would rather run than
fly.
Nests are built of branches and lined with grass. Instead of building a new nest each
year, as many birds do, they add a new layer of grass. The female lays two or three large
eggs, and then incubates them. Her mate brings her meals. Since it takes six weeks for
the eggs to hatch, he has to do a lot of hunting.