‘There are no bells and whistles but then that's not what you want with a compact pushchair,’ said our tester Darryl. The Push Me 2U is sturdy yet light, simple yet sleek. This Red Kite stroller is a great option for when children are too big to be pushed around in a heavy-duty pram and you want a buggy that’s easy to handle, especially when you're travelling. For this reason, it's our pick of the best budget buy in our travel strollers buying guide. ‘It's hassle-free and also comfy for baby and the pusher.' The Red Kite might not be as slick and have the extras that the other strollers have but its price point is pretty unbeatable and it more than does the job required of it. The comfort of the person pushing has been considered too and the handlebars are padded. While un-enamoured with its looks, Darryl likes that the seat feels well-padded and was spacious - even for her older child. It’s easy to fold and goes down into a ‘pretty compact size’, although she flagged that some people may want a more compact fold depending on their travel needs.ĭarryl tested the plum colour (it comes in black too) and admitted she isn’t a huge fan of this shade. Our tester Darryl found it required assembly – including putting on the hood – when it first arrived, but it was relatively easy to piece together. The Red Kite Push Me 2U stroller doesn’t come with lots of innovations but it weighs just 5.6kg and is easy to manoeuvre around. See all weight loss and exercise features.Child development stages: Ages 0-16 years.See all conception & fertility features.Fines for taking children out of school.But according to Godino, the Spanish kites can thrive again because tough measures – including prison sentences for illegal poisoning – have now reduced red kite mortality. The carrion-feeding red kite has declined in Spain because of the poisoning of animal carcasses, sometimes to protect lambs from foxes. “It’s really amazing that this one action – the reintroduction in England – can get a lovely reaction even three decades later.” “From a genetic point of view, these birds are really close to the Iberian birds still living here,” said Alfonso Godino, the project manager of Acción por el Mundo Salvaje (Amus), one of the reintroduction partners in Spain, where the population has slumped to fewer than 10 breeding pairs in the south-west. Kites to Spain sounds a bit like coals to Newcastle but they’ve become endangered there after problems with persecution.” Karl Ivens, wildlife ranger manager for Forestry England, said: “I joked to the Spanish ecologist in the 1990s that ‘one day I’ll bring them back to you’, never expecting it to be true. Thirty birds will be taken to Spain every summer for three years in the project, funded by the EU’s Life programme and supported in Britain by organisations including the RSPB and the Roy Dennis Wildlife Foundation. The birds are taken at between four and six weeks old, so there is no risk they will become tame or “imprinted” upon humans. Nests are monitored and a single chick is taken only from nests with multiple chicks, so the wild birds continue to rear offspring and don’t abandon their nest. Karl Ivens, right, RSPB field officer Simon Dudhill and vet Sophie Common prepare the red kite chicks for Spain.
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