Cyclist dies after being swooped by a magpie in Wollongong

A swooping magpie startled an elderly NSW cyclist who veered off a path to avoid the bird and crashed; he died from fatal head injuries,

Magpies are most prone to swooping during the August to October period.

Magpies are most prone to swooping during the August to October period. Source: AAP

An elderly man has died of head injuries after he was startled by a magpie and crashed his bicycle south of Sydney.

The 76-year-old was riding a pushbike on an off-road path alongside Nicholson Park at Woonona, Wollongong, on Sunday morning when witnesses report he veered off to avoid a swooping magpie.

He collided with a fence post and was thrown to the ground, and suffered serious head injuries.

The man was airlifted to St George Hospital in a critical condition but died later that evening.
Cyclists are particularly at risk of swooping magpies.
Cyclists are particularly at risk of swooping magpies. Source: AAP
Magpies usually breed between August and October, which means they are more likely to swoop people in an attempt to protect their eggs or chicks.

According to Magpie Alert, a website that collects reports of magpie swooping incidents, , encompassing 69 per cent of reports so far in 2019. 

Earlier this month, a Sydney council shot dead a "particularly aggressive magpie" after it had allegedly injured a number of people.

More than 40 complaints had reportedly been lodged with the Hills Shire Council about the magpie, which attacked people on Bella Vista's Old Windsor Road, .

"[It was] swooping underneath helmets ... to attack people's faces," a council spokesperson said in a statement.

"This bird was very aggressive and uncharacteristically territorial."


Share
2 min read
Published 16 September 2019 7:42am
Updated 16 September 2019 8:52am

Share this with family and friends