
The local council deploys attack swans to enforce strict new high street parking fines after concluding that paper tickets, camera vans and passive-aggressive signs featuring a red circle simply lacked the necessary bite.
By Our Angling Correspondent: Courtney Pike
Motorists arriving in the market town on Tuesday were greeted by a new sign at the entrance to the high street: “PARK WITHIN THE BAY OR FACE THE COB.” Beneath it, six large white birds stood in a disciplined line beside the pay-and-display machine, each wearing a small fluorescent tabard and the expression of an animal that has previously seen a child with a bread roll.
The scheme, believed to be the first of its kind in Britain and almost certainly the last before lunchtime, was unveiled by councillors as a “firm but graceful response” to complaints about cars being left three inches over the faded white lines outside Boots.
Attack swans take charge of high street parking fines
Under the new arrangement, drivers are given five minutes to purchase a ticket, return to their vehicle and demonstrate, through either good parking or visible remorse, that they are fit to rejoin civilised society. Anyone caught overstaying receives a warning honk. A second offence results in a close inspection of the wing mirrors. By the third, the swan is authorised to advance with intent.
Council parking enforcement manager Clive Pritchard said the birds had been selected after a lengthy procurement process involving three suppliers, a retired gamekeeper and a woman from the village Facebook group who claimed to “know a bit about animals”.
“People assume a swan is decorative,” he said, standing at a safe distance behind a bus shelter. “That is exactly the attitude which has led to unauthorised parking outside Greggs. These are highly motivated public servants. They do not take bribes, although one did accept half a sausage roll from a councillor and is now being investigated.”
Mr Pritchard insisted the animals were not technically trained to attack. “We prefer the phrase ‘proactively confrontational’. They are encouraged to use their natural skills: hissing, looming and making a grown man in a leased Audi apologise to a bird.”
The council says every swan has completed a rigorous induction programme. This reportedly included recognising yellow lines, identifying a blue badge, and refusing to be distracted by a woman saying she was “only popping in”. One bird, named Derek by staff despite evidence suggesting it is female, has also been trained to stare through the windscreen of any vehicle displaying a disabled badge from 1998, a Little Chef loyalty card and three empty Monster cans.
Residents welcome the feathered crackdown
Reaction in the town has been mixed, which is the traditional local authority definition of 14 people complaining online before breakfast.
Shopkeeper Anita Weller, who runs a gift shop specialising in wooden signs that say things like “Prosecco Made Me Do It”, said the policy had already improved the high street. “Normally, people park on the double yellows while they nip to the cashpoint, buy a pasty and spend forty minutes discussing somebody’s hip replacement outside the chemist. This morning they were all moving with real purpose. One chap paid for two hours and then walked away backwards.”
Not everybody was convinced. Retired accountant Brian Moss said he had been “set upon” while attempting to unload a box of printer paper outside his office.
“It was only two minutes,” he said. “Then this massive thing came over, made a noise like a trombone being strangled, and pecked the parking ticket out of my hand. Frankly, I’ve had friendlier encounters with HMRC.”
The council has promised that vulnerable drivers will be treated sensitively. A designated “calm bay” has been installed near the library, where anyone feeling overwhelmed may sit for ten minutes while a parking marshal explains the rules using coloured cards and a slightly less furious swan.
There will also be exemptions for emergency vehicles, delivery lorries and anybody who can prove they are taking their mother to the optician. The latter must be supported by a signed note from the mother, a prescription dated within six months, and a convincing inability to reverse.
A budget solution with wings
The initiative follows a difficult year for council finances, during which officials were asked to find savings without closing anything residents liked, raising tax, charging for bins, or cancelling the Christmas lights shaped like a slightly disappointed reindeer.
According to internal figures accidentally printed on the back of a village fete flyer, the attack swan unit costs considerably less than a conventional enforcement team. The birds require a pond, a modest supply of grain and one junior officer whose role is to say “No sudden movements” whenever a motorist questions the policy.
Councillor Maureen Flegg, cabinet member for highways, wildlife and other things that cause a scene in public, said the programme represented “the sort of innovative thinking people demand until it happens near their car”.
“We considered wheel clamps,” she said. “But swans are more environmentally friendly, more photogenic and, crucially, cannot be appealed against through a website. They have no login portal. They merely remember your face.”
Asked whether the birds might become too powerful, Councillor Flegg laughed, then stopped when one of them began slapping its wings against the council minibus. “They are fully accountable,” she added. “The senior swan reports directly to me, usually by walking into meetings and eating the agenda.”
High street businesses brace for swan patrols
Some traders worry the scheme could frighten away customers, particularly those from neighbouring villages who already regard town-centre parking as an extreme sport. The council argues that the opposite will happen.
“Shoppers enjoy certainty,” said Mr Pritchard. “Previously, they never knew whether they would come back to a £70 penalty charge. Now they know precisely what to expect: a £70 penalty charge and a seven-kilo waterfowl judging their parallel parking.”
To encourage footfall, the council has introduced a loyalty scheme. Spend more than £25 in participating shops and drivers can receive 15 minutes of swan amnesty, provided they present their receipts before the bird becomes aware of them. A trial partnership with the local garden centre is also under way, although officials admit this has created a loophole whereby customers are buying one packet of sunflower seeds and claiming diplomatic immunity.
The swans themselves have taken quickly to their municipal duties. At midday, a black BMW was observed edging into a loading bay with its hazard lights flashing, the universal British signal for “I have invented a new law for myself”. Within seconds, two birds surrounded the vehicle. A third stood on the bonnet with the poise of a minor royal opening a bypass.
The driver eventually moved on, telling reporters he had been “bullied by the state”. Derek responded by hissing at his registration plate for nearly four minutes.
Animal welfare groups have queried whether the birds are being asked to perform beyond their natural remit. A council spokesman said the swans receive regular breaks, access to fresh water and “all the discarded meal deals they can reasonably carry”. He rejected rumours that they would next be deployed to deal with littering, noisy mopeds or parents stopping outside schools because little Finley had forgotten his recorder.
For now, the council’s message is simple: read the signs, park properly and do not attempt to negotiate with a swan. It has heard every excuse, fears no hatchback and has absolutely no interest in your claim that the app would not load.
Anyone visiting the high street this week is advised to bring correct change, leave enough room for a pram, and keep a respectful distance from anything white, winged and wearing a council-issued tabard. You couldn’t make it up.




