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That means breeding season follows the same rhythm every year.
Australia’s Magpie Alert map has already recorded 2,753 swoops and 295 injuries this year. Source: Supplied / Magpie Alert!
The peak of swooping season falls this weekend and stretches into next week. That’s when the maximum number of magpies are nesting, with eggs or chicks to protect, Jones said.
Australia’s Magpie Alert map, where the public reports encounters, has already recorded 2,753 swoops and 295 injuries this year.
A misunderstood neighbour
And even those few birds rarely attack without warning. About 100m from a nest, magpies use a distinctive call to tell people to back off. If ignored, they may fly low overhead. Only when those signals are missed do they swoop.

Magpies might swoop cyclists who get too close to their nests. Source: AAP
“We’ve missed all the earlier cues they’ve been trying to give us,” Jones said. “But we don’t get it. We don’t understand it.”
“Only a small proportion of them attack just anybody. They’re the ones that get all the publicity. But they’re stressed out of their scones,” Jones said.
More than a bird
“Their explanation was that every morning, magpies recreate the first dawn from their perspective. That’s how strong and passionate they are about this bird.”
Jones studied these stories as part of his work as an ecologist. “They have a lot of stories about magpies, but none of them were about swooping,” he said. “This is a white-people-in-big-cities phenomenon.”
A new friend?
“They know all the people in their territory. They never leave the territory unless they have to. And they might live for 20 years or so,” Jones says. “If those magpies see you regularly and get to know you, I think they would know you and trust you.”
“There’s a Jekyll and Hyde thing with magpies,” Jones says. “They’re a wonderful bird that everybody seems to appreciate, but they can be terrifying if they’ve attacked you.”