I saw something last Friday afternoon that I hope never to see again – two male swans fighting, almost to the death.

I had just finished feeding seed to the water birds and pigeons when the battle commenced. I presume the second male had made a move towards the mate of the first, rather than it being a dispute over territory. This happened on Roath Park Lake in Cardiff, where the swans seem to move freely all around the lake and only get truly territorial in the mating season, which this was not.

These males were vicious, flapping their broad strong wings at each other, using their necks to wrestle and push, biting each other’s wing feathers. At first I was intrigued and took quite a lot of photos but, as the fight continued and neither swan was prepared to give way, I became concerned.

The female and this year’s two cygnets also grew more and more agitated. Both the female and one of the cygnets chased away other swans that came close, and the female tried to intervene but just got battered by the flapping wings of the males.

After twenty minutes or so, it was obvious both swans were getting weary but one, the interloper, was definitely weakening more. The dominant male tried to climb onto the back of the weaker bird, to push it under the water, and grabbed its neck, holding its head under the water to drown it.

By this stage a small crowd of people had gathered and we were all rather shocked and becoming increasingly horrified by what was happening. Luckily, the swans were very close to the edge of the lake where there is a concrete pavement and one rather brave man managed to grab the neck of the dominant swan and held on until the other male could get some air and recover enough to swim away. If it hadn’t been for his actions, the weaker swan would definitely have drowned. I know this is a natural occurrence, this is how Nature operates, but it was still really shocking to see such violence play out in what is usually such a calm and peaceful setting.
I too have witnessed something very similar to this & it is truly distressing… I have looked after a cob for the last 10 years, he arrived on the pond outside our house as a youngster, with a mate…. Tragically, some low life shot his mate dead, leaving our boy on his own… A few years later another pair arrived, wanting his territory… the two males fought…. As a neighbourhood we discouraged the newcomers and fortunately they got the message and left…. The following Spring, the pair returned, more fighting – this time the other male flew off – leaving his ‘wife’ behind… She and our fella are still together and have raised 3 families, they still have a cygnet with them from last year…. When the families are younger it’s almost a full time job feeding them…they are constantly at my back door demanding – but it’s an honour & a privilege & I love it !!
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What a wonderful happy ending and how lovely to be able to share your life with these beautiful creatures. Thanks for sharing. 🙂
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That must have been quite shocking to watch, but you captured a great series of images. I know intervention is frowned upon in natural events, but I’m glad too that someone stepped in.
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Thanks, Theresa. It was really quite horrifying.
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I still have a nose now and then (hope you don’t mind).
Pleased I did, good read, with great pics.
Pleased it ended as it did too.
Take care old friend, and keep snapping.
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You are welcome here any time, Ben, and thanks so much for your comments. 🙂
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Thanks Annie ☺️
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Oh wow, that’s really beautiful and scary! Animals can be ruthless to each other. It sounds to me like the winning swan was mounting/ mock mating the other to show dominance. This is what ducks do and it looks very alarming, but it always turns out fine. But I’m not an expert on swans and I wasn’t there of course! Anyway I’m glad they both walked/swam away from it! X
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It may have been mock mating, as you suggest, but the weaker swan was very close to drowning. The dominant one was deliberately holding its head under water. It was quite horrifying to watch such violence in creatures I normally think of as graceful and elegant.
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Wow, yes that sounds very horrible! And they are big, strong animals… It must have been alarming to watch! X
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