Offbeat | Teams on the Thames count the monarch’s swans

offbeat0722Teams of census-takers took to the River Thames on Monday for the colorful annual count of Queen Elizabeth II’s swans — a blend of science and ceremony that dates to the 12th century.
By tradition, the monarch owns all the swans found in Britain’s open waters, and the event assesses their overall well-being.
The queen, who counts Seigneur of the Swans among her many titles, only exercises her ownership rights on certain stretches of the Thames.
When a brood of young swans is spotted, a boatman cries “all up” and others round up the family of birds and take them out of the muddy river.
Wardens, zoologists and boatmen then count, measure, weigh and ring the swans in order to safeguard the population and determine its health.
The queen deploys her envoys down the river for five days to see how her swans have fared from potential threats like minks, fish hooks and hooligans using air guns.
So far, things aren’t looking good. The Queen’s Swan Marker, David Barber says the six broods they found Monday morning were “thin on the ground.”
Barber, who has led the swan upping expedition for 22 years, said the increase of vandalism is to blame.

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