It is a success story of happy coexistence: Outnumbered by storks, residents of the Polish hamlet of Zywkowo warmly welcome the birds on their roofs.
Kept afloat by EU and non-profit funding, the northern hamlet — a stone’s throw from the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad — depends on storks for the tourism it needs to survive.
“In the 1960s, we had 120 residents and 20 storks. Today it is the opposite,” says retired farmer Wladyslaw Andrejew.
While too poor to keep the younger generation from leaving, this part of the country is paradise on earth for the large, red-legged birds.
More than 15,000 White Stork couples flock to the lake-rich northern region of Masuria every summer, according to local officials.
Poland as a whole sees an average of 50,000 storks a year, or 20 percent of the world’s population.
Since he was little, 64-year-old Andrejew has been passionate about storks, building and fixing massive nests for his animal pals on roofs, in trees and on poles around the farm.
When he retired, Andrejew sold his farm to the bird protection society PTOP, a non-profit organization based in the northeastern city of Bialystok.
Using the farm as a local base has allowed PTOP to launch a series of projects aimed at welcoming storks into the area.
“We harvest hay, dig ponds, put up new platforms for their nests, fix the old platforms, insulate the electric lines for the birds’ safety,” says farm manager Adam Lopuszynski.
“We bought these aerial lifts firemen use, which help us reach and repair the big nests up high.”
A stork’s nest generally weighs around 500 kgs but can reach up to quadruple that, or two tons.
PTOP acquired a total of 75 hectares of land around Zywkowo and planted a mishmash of crops as that’s what the bird prefers.
“Storks set up camp wherever there’s a mosaic of plots of land,” Lopuszynski says.
“We want to show that if we take care of nature, we can live side by side with the stork,” adds the former sociologist turned bird-watcher.
Zywkowo’s three-year stork protection program, which was cofunded by the European Union and ends this year, cost around 1.5 million euros ($2 million), according to PTOP official Sebastian Menderski.
“We do everything with the stork in mind. It’s all for the bird,” he says.
“The area’s future depends on the stork. If all the young people leave, our hamlet will disappear,” adds mayor Stefan Hryszko.
“Thanks to the stork, there’s investment, there are jobs and there’s construction. That will keep us around.”
Plus, “it’s the storks who bring newborns!” jokes Andrejew, father of five, citing an ancient legend still used in advertising, storybooks and popular imagery today.
“Some even say it’s enough for a woman to look at a stork to get pregnant.”
In Poland, a stork is a man’s best friend
In Poland, a stork is a man’s best friend
