Bertie the lonely peacock keeps wandering into villagers' gardens looking for love

A ghostly white peacock is scaring locals in a West Sussex village by wandering into their gardens looking for a mate.

Lovelorn bird Bertie is often mistaken for a ghost as he wanders the tiny village – while on the hunt for a girlfriend.

Bertie the peacock (SWNS)
Bertie the peacock (SWNS)

Every year during peacock mating season, Bertie makes the mile-long pilgrimage from his home to a neighbouring village – where he goes from house-to-house to find his love.

Last year Rose Botting, 55, had her first encounter with the mischievous Bertie when he caused a week of havoc blocking roads, hopping onto rooftops and startling locals.

Exactly a year later, Bertie flew away from home again and is once more terrorising villagers – by sitting on their roofs and peering through windows.

Bertie is on the hunt for a mate (SWNS0
Bertie is on the hunt for a mate (SWNS0

Bertie hopes to attract a mate by fanning his beautiful white feathers and dancing in her neighbour’s drive, despite there being no peahens with miles of the tiny West Sussex village of Handcross.

Rose said: ‘Bertie wasn’t going anywhere so I had the bright idea of going onto the internet and searching for a peacock’s calling.

‘I played all three minutes and 22 seconds of it.

‘As I started walking down the road, Bertie jumped off the roof and started following me.’

When Bertie reached the top of the close, he put his tail feathers up into a full glimmering plumage, a courtship ritual peacocks perform to attract a mate.

Peacocks show their plumage to attract a mate (SWNS)
Peacocks show their plumage to attract a mate (SWNS)

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Bertie is likely to be out of luck though as there are no peahens in the village (SWNS)
Bertie is likely to be out of luck though as there are no peahens in the village (SWNS)

It seemed Bertie had chosen his bride when he ended up on Rose’s roof.

Concerned for his safety, Rose continued to play the peacock calling from the bottom of her garden in the hope he would come down.

She said: ‘I made sure I locked my dogs indoors so they try and eat him.’

She contacted owner Jo Wilding, 50, from nearby Slaugham, who rushed to the village and tried to get her peacock back.

Bertie attracted a noisy crowd of neighbours and he did not want to budge.

When the mischievous pet finally made a run for it, Rose tried to herd him towards an area of park woodland and into the trees to avoid him getting run over.

No one nears where Bertie comes from as he just turned up at a nearby West Sussex farm one day (Rex)
No one nears where Bertie comes from as he just turned up at a nearby West Sussex farm one day (Rex)

She said: “We thought that would work until a bit later, I looked up at my roof and there he was again.

“He’d got down for a walk and got back up again.”

The pair came to the conclusion Bertie had nestled down for the night and decided to pursue their rescue mission again the next day.

Bertie has been spotted in the tiny village of Handcross (SWNS)
Bertie has been spotted in the tiny village of Handcross (SWNS)

The grandmother-of-four woke up to discover he had fled, but thankfully Jo was eventually able to track him down.

Jo said: ‘He is quite nomadic and very curious. He was basically looking for a mate, that’s why he shouts and displays his feathers.

“The females usually come running but nothing turned up here so that’s why he takes himself off to the village.’