Magpie causes flutter at railway platform

Thursday 21st July 2011, 9:00PM BST.

Magpie causes flutter at railway platform

She’s as cheeky as they come and livens up the day for thousands of commuters – meet Maggie the Magpie very much at home on Platform One at a Midlands train station.

She has befriended passengers and staff at Stourbridge Junction train station, sharing their snacks, landing on their heads or shoulders and even trying to jump on a train.

The friendly bird likes to be stroked, sits on people’s laps and rummages in ladies’ handbags.

And, when people pop their coins into the station’s ticket machine, Maggie sits on top and watches intently.

One passenger Alex Cairns, aged 17, of Blakedown, near Kidderminster, was sitting on a bench waiting for a train home after a session at a local gym, when Maggie landed next to him.

“I thought ‘whoa, what’s happening?’ – and it was a bit odd,” said Alex, a sixth former at Hagley’s Haybridge High School.

“At first I thought it was going to peck me but it was just friendly and eating the crisps.”

Line supervisor Steve Darby, aged 41, said: “We’re not sure if Maggie is a he or a she but we call her a she. The bird has become a daily visitor over the last couple of weeks.”

“Maggie’s very friendly and I’ve seen her on all three platforms, sometimes on people’s heads, sitting by them and eating their food.

“The other night I was cleaning at about 9pm and Maggie flew on to an elderly lady’s lap and she was stroking the bird.”

Mr Darby added: “Nothing seems to faze Maggie.

“If she’s by the platform when a train comes she moves back towards the railings – but she doesn’t fly off.

“And when I saw her on the lady’s lap she was there for quite a time – and the woman enjoyed it.”

Train driver Debbie Digger, aged 47, who works on the Stourbridge “Dodger”, the shuttle service between the Junction and Town stations, said: “One day I saw Maggie land on a chap’s shoulder and share his sandwich.

“Then she tried to jump on to the train. She’s just part of the crew here now.”

Rail staff believe that Maggie was an orphan who was taken in and raised by a couple in Lutley Drive, Chawn Park, who have an aviary in one of the houses backing on to the car park of the station.

And the bird now spends her days happily flitting between their garden and her fans at the train station.

So now passengers can while away the time as they wait with a spot of bird – as well as train – spotting.

Stourbridge Junction station engineer Gary Picken said: “I’ve seen Maggie helping herself to sandwiches and going into bags to see what’s there.”

Spokesman Hayley Meachin, of London Midland, which runs Stourbridge Junction station, said today: “We have a wealth of wildlife around our stations because of where they are and the fact that they are open.

“On Saturday our staff at Gravelly Hill station in Birmingham had to deal with a four foot long grass snake on a ramp – and on June 26 a dog hopped on the 9.19 Four Oaks to Redditch train and was taken off by the RSPCA at New Street.

“Maggie seems to be unique because she’s so tame – but, like other magpies, she has the characteristic of being curious.

“It may be alarming to suddenly have a bird sat next to you – but it’s not dangerous.”



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