This afternoon we had a thunder shower which turned into a hailstorm for about ten minutes. There were two woodpigeons sitting on our garden boundary fence. When it began to hail they rolled slightly over to one side and raised the uppermost wing exposing the flank, axillaries and underwing to the falling hailstones, fanning their tails at the same time. They did this with with both wings for , perhaps, 30 seconds at a time as long as the hail fell. Once the hail reverted to rain they settled back to a normal perched position with closed wings and began preening their neck and breast feathers.
Anyone seen similar or able to provide an explanation of this behaviour?
John
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