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« on: 20-Nov-09, 06:58:48 AM » |
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STATE COLLEGE â For a third year, hundreds of unwanted visitors, hailing from parts of Canada and New England, are dotting the skies above State College. The crows â they've got to go. 112108Crows_3
âWeâre hoping the word will get out among the crows and theyâll no longer find State College a favorite place for winter,â said Phillip Mel-nick, director of buildings and grounds for Penn Stateâs Office of Physical Plant at Monday nightâs State College Borough Council meeting. âHopefully theyâll tell their friends, âHey, donât come to State College.â â
Between 2007 and 2008, the crow population descending upon State College has increased from 1,500 to 3,000, he added.
Penn Stateâs Office of Physical Plant has tried everything, including an attempt in 2007 to deter the birds from roosting using cotton candy scented fog above the Allen Street/College Avenue bus stop.
Last November, OPP tried frightening the avian pests by launching 102 small firecrackers âcalled âbangers and screamersâ â between Whitmore and Pond laboratories on the north side of Pollock Road. After 75 dead crow effigies were dangled upside down from the trees in that area, many
of the birds began roosting in Hort Woods, a wooded plot in North Campus. Advertisement
Hort Woods is a mecca of crow amenities, including pine trees, a lit walkway and proximity to warmth from buildings, Melnick told council.
However, Gary Schultz Child Care Center is set for construction near Hort Woods. Small children and hoards of squawking crows donât mix, Melnick said.
This time, officials are hoping to relocate the crows to a clump of trees east of the visitorâs center or the duck pond near the universityâs wastewater treatment facility. Firework displays similar to those last year could start as early as next week, Melnick said.
âThis will be more difficult,â he added. âThe new areas donât have the characteristics that crows normally prefer.â
Melnick said officials might erect portable light towers, similar to those that illuminate the tailgating fields after night football games, to make the new roosting areas more attractive to the crows.
Earlier this year, officials discussed employing hunters to release their licensed falcons and hawks into crowds of crows in hopes of sending them packing. On Monday, Melnick said that idea hasnât been ruled out.
Last year, officials trapped some crows and tagged them with radio transmitters. One has returned this year, Melnick said, with the transmitter still working, and has been tracked at many places, including behind the Arboretum on Park Avenue.
âYou donât know where theyâre going to go when you harass them,â he added. âWe have our work cut out for us. ... Weâll adjust on the fly, so to speak.â
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