The Flying Rats
Fishsick Nosewhistle – the alien on the kitchen roof
Think of seagulls and an elysian vision of a graceful white dart set against a seaside blue sky surely springs to mind. Or you may hear their distant cry as a soundtrack to an imaginary desert island with undisturbed perfect golden sand.
Snap out of it. Wake up and smell the guano, because no amount of misty-eyed shoreline romance will help when gulls move in. One minute they’re wheeling through the sky, sunlight through their wings, next thing you know, they’re squabbling on your kitchen roof with their repertoire of noise and avian antagonism. That’s when you find out that living cheek-by-beak with gulls is like living in a colony of sociopathic pterodactyls.
Pushed a long way from idyllic, barefoot beach fantasy by their prehistoric mewling, animal aggression and the more or less constant aura of rotting fish, it becomes a battle of nerves to recapture the kitchen roof.
Forced into territorial dispute with them every time they catch sight of you in your own home, it won’t be long until you are imbued with prehistoric mewling and animal aggression yourself. You turn into your enemy, you become the foe. Just try not to take it too far and avoid regurgitating raw fish down the throat of your youngest child.
Graceful, poised sky-based shit machine.
It’s the brain skewering noise that’s worst. Gulls sound great from a distance, the perfect embodiment of seaside lazy days spent sundrenched and woozy on a golden beach. At anything nearer than ten yards all that changes. At close quarters, it’s like having an ambulance siren fitted to your nasal cavity. The head tossing clarion cry isn’t the only noise they make. There’s a collection of self-satisfied asthmatic cackles and some conversational broody whines. The young issue infrasonic nose-whistles until you threaten to bury them under a plate of cold wet mash, after which they hide under one of their parents and continue.
For further evidence for The Attack, look no further than their alleged grace and beauty. Nothing that shits that much is either graceful or beautiful, but that’s not their only aesthetic problem. Grace can be further ruled out on account of the extraordinarily ungainly act of gull love.

It’s an ugly, brutal-looking affair and not exactly romantic but, then again, when did your partner last get home from work with a throat full of partially digested fish to share? It’s not like either of them have any redeeming features to call upon. So, no romance, but what they lack in quality is made up for by the sheer quantity of fluids being exchanged. There’s enough rooftop avian fornication about to make a strong case that we live in a renaissance painting of the End Times.
The final piece of evidence concerns the outcome of the rooftop sex: rooftop chicks. While fluffy and endearing at first, they eventually turn into the cold-eyed, hook-beaked airborne vermin that they must.

It takes three years for the nose-whistling, gawky cuddleplump with the enormous feet to achieve the full dubious promise of its genetic code, but it makes a swift start. Within weeks it’s first wary attempt at flight will end in your garden where it will stay for several days, unable to leave and whining for food like an abandoned teenager. Any attempt to rescue, feed or encourage it to fly by chasing it around the garden with a stick will result in a blitzreig of unparalleled ferocity and guano.
It will leave eventually and earn its wings. You can expect to see it until winter where it will squeak at every passing adult hoping to score a tasty spot of fishsick. Ultimately, it will graduate into a graceful white dart calling plaintively in a beautiful blue sky. And then it will come to live on your kitchen roof, where it will fuck like a dinosaur while the contents of its bowels corrode your gutters.
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About the Creator
Ian Vince
Erstwhile non-fiction author, ghost & freelance writer for others, finally submitting work that floats my own boat, does my own thing. I'll deal with it if you can.
Top Writer in Humo(u)r.



Comments (12)
amazing
Pigeons disgust me 🤣 but seagulls scare me because of the Hitchcock's movie "The Birds"🤣
I exhaled forcefully thinking about pigeon sex. Congrats on a great story
I despise them, but I love this!
You succeeded in making me laugh through the poem-- you have become up close and personal with breeding brood of bipeds and are still surviving -- and so are they.- here's hoping your head gear will protect you from their dive bombs
Every sentence, every paragraph was a delight to read. You took something very uninteresting and made it a fantastic experience. Bravo.
The whole thing was great, but ending the paragraph on seagull sex with “renaissance painting of the end times” was disturbingly brilliant!
Great trashpost about seagulls. 💩 This is so true! "Gulls sound great from a distance, the perfect embodiment of seaside lazy days spent sundrenched and woozy on a golden beach. At anything nearer than ten yards all that changes. At close quarters, it’s like having an ambulance siren fitted to your nasal cavity. The head tossing clarion cry isn’t the only noise they make. There’s a collection of self-satisfied asthmatic cackles and some conversational broody whines."
This is such a brilliantly honest and hilarious take on the reality behind the romanticized image of seagulls. Thanks for keeping it real!
Yes, another that knows the hidden horror of the foulest fowl known to man. Well done!
I agree seagulls are disgusting! They smell and they steal your chips 🍟 No one touches my chips
You painted a vivid picture of seagulls! I've had similar experiences. Their sudden squabbles near my place are a nuisance. And that noise? It's like an unwanted alarm going off non-stop.