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Author Topic: Swan killed at San Francisco Palace of Fine Arts : broken neck  (Read 4036 times)
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Donna
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« on: 15-Nov-10, 07:13:41 AM »

Vandals are suspected in the death of one of the last of the graceful swans that have swum for years in the placid lagoon at San Francisco's Palace of Fine Arts. On Saturday morning, volunteer caretakers for the birds discovered the body of the swan, whose neck had been broken.

"To pull her out of the water was just devastating," said Gayle Hagerty, who has been caring for the swans for the past 17 years.

Hagerty found empty beer cans amid feathers and believes the female swan, also known as a pen, was intentionally killed. She did not think the swan was killed by animals because the bird had no apparent injuries other than the snapped neck.

The swan, a 5-year-old named Monday, was killed six months after her 19-year-old mother, Friday, was stolen, leaving only Monday's sister, 13-year-old Blanche, Hagerty said. Blanche is now the only swan that graces a lagoon designed with the birds in mind.

The original sketches for the Palace of Fine Arts, which was designed by Bernard Maybeck and built in 1915 for the Panama-Pacific Exposition, included two Mute Swans swimming in the lagoon, Hagerty said.

"Maybeck loved the Mute Swans and felt they were an integral part," she added. "This was really a senseless and hideous thing."

The swans slept on the grass and under trees near the artificial lagoon in what is a largely unprotected area, Hagerty said. The Mute Swans, named so because they are less vocal than other swan species, can live up to 40 years.

"They are a unique ... part of what makes the Palace of Fine Arts so special to so many people," Hagerty said, adding that Monday was especially gentle and sweet natured. "They are lovely spirits that really had personalities, and it's heartbreaking to lose them."

San Francisco Animal Care and Control is in charge of the investigation. Animal control officers removed the body and are planning to conduct a necropsy.

Anyone with information about the case is urged to call animal control at (415) 554-9400.

E-mail Victoria Colliver at vcolliver@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page A - 16 of the San Francisco Chronicle



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Donna
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« Reply #1 on: 19-Nov-10, 07:15:59 AM »

Sadness, seething over swan killing in SF

SAN FRANCISCO — There will be no swan song at the Palace of Fine Arts lagoon.

Caretakers mourning Saturday’s brutal killing of a swan that lived in the landmark pond are hell-bent on finding the murderer and looking for a new bird to be donated so that the last surviving swan isn’t lonely.

Mute swans, so called for their quiet demeanor, have waded at the Palace of Fine Arts since the 1915 Panama Pacific Exposition. While they’ve added to the aesthetics of the scenic lagoon, they’ve been targeted several times by cruel visitors.

Sometime between 2 and 6 a.m. Saturday, someone broke the neck of the younger of two remaining swans, Hagerty said. Fellow caretaker Judy Whilt found the body of the 5-year-old bird, named Monday, floating in the lagoon. Empty beer cans were also spotted at the crime scene, she said.

That night, there was a “huge beer party” on the Baker Street side of the lagoon, Whilt said. San Francisco Animal Care & Control is investigating.

“They say most serial murderers abuse animals in their youth, so we might have one in the making,” an angry Whilt said.

The surviving swan is Monday’s sister, 13-year-old Blanche. The death hasn’t yet sunk in for the sibling, who is now enjoying more grub than usual, Whilt said. Their mother, a 19-year-old swan named Friday, went missing from the lagoon in April.

In the last 25 years, three swans have been killed. Six years ago, there were as many as 13 swans in the lagoon, though most were given away, partly because it can become expensive to care for them, Hagerty said.

Caretakers pay out of pocket to offer daily monitoring and nourishment for the swans, Hagerty said.

Finding a companion for Blanche will not be easy. Recent laws prohibiting sales of swans will mean one must be donated, Hagerty said.

“I talked to the breeder and he has none,” she said. “The breeder is looking to people he knows to have donated to us.”

The caretakers are offering a $500 reward for information leading to a conviction in the Saturday swan murder case. That reward is expected to grow, as locals have expressed interest in donating funds, Hagerty said.

Marina district residents are “dumbfounded” by the killing, Whilt said.

The swan caretakers said they hope the death will encourage a larger police presence at the Palace of Fine Arts, particularly at night when much of the area becomes pitch black, Whilt said.

Lagoon’s grand dame may have been found

A swan that disappeared in April from the lagoon at the Palace of Fine Arts may have been found, caretaker Gayle Hagerty said Tuesday.

“I have a lead on her,” Hagerty exclaimed.

The bird, named Friday, may have been stolen, Hagerty said. Friday was the mother of 5-year-old Monday, who was killed at the lagoon on Saturday.

“She was my queen,” said Hagerty of the 19-year-old Friday, whom she had cared for since the bird was 2 years old.

About six months ago, San Francisco Animal Care & Control found a mute swan, the same type of swan as Friday, in the backyard of an undisclosed residence in San Francisco’s avenues, Hagerty said. It is not yet known whether the swan was Friday.

After the find, Animal Care & Control did not contact the Palace of Fine Arts swan caretakers. The agency found a new home for the swan, caretaker Judy Whilt said.
“If it’s happy where it is, we will leave it,” Whilt said.

Sole survivor: Gail Hagerty, one of the caretakers of the swans at the Palace of Fine Arts pond, feeds Blanche, the last remaining swan, whose sister was killed last week.

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« Reply #2 on: 19-Nov-10, 09:04:01 AM »

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« Reply #3 on: 19-Nov-10, 09:34:19 AM »

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« Reply #4 on: 21-Nov-10, 05:50:08 PM »

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Donna
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« Reply #5 on: 05-Jan-11, 06:36:47 AM »

Blanche is back and she’s brought some friends to enjoy the lagoon at the Palace of Fine Arts with her.

The 13-year-old white mute swan — which was removed from her home in November for protection after her sister Monday was killed by vandals — was returned quietly Sunday, according to her caregivers.

“It’s been so good to see them on the water,” said Gayle Hagerty, one of Blanche’s caretakers “It just felt so lonely without them; it felt very incomplete.”

Hagerty, along with her colleague Judy Whilt, found Blanche her new companions: brother and sister white mute swans Belly and Blue Boy.

Those birds were flown in from New York six weeks ago and housed at Jack Long’s 1-acre exotic-bird sanctuary in Point Reyes Station. Blanche joined the pair just before Christmas so they could all become acquainted.

Long, an exotic bird and waterfowl breeder, said swans like Blanche are known to be companion animals. In November, Blanche became the last remaining swan in the lagoon after unknown assailants killed Monday by snapping her neck.

“[Blanche] could’ve stayed in the lagoon,” he said, “but she would’ve gotten pretty lonely.”

Swans had been incorporated into the design of the Palace of Fine Arts, which was built in 1915 as part of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.

According to Hagerty, Blanche seemed pleased to be home.

“She’s all wiggles. She was doing some dives in to the water and flapping wings,” Hagerty said. “Blanche is so happy to be back.”

Her companions, however, are taking a little longer to adjust.

“It’s to be expected,” Hagerty said. “They’ve had a lot of handling in the last six weeks.”

To prepare for the return and prevent future disturbance of the animals, the Recreation and Park Department, which oversees the Palace of Fine Arts, is reviewing security measures including surveillance, according to Hagerty.

A security guard has already been stationed at the lagoon, Hagerty said.  clap

akoskey@sfexaminer.com


Blanche the swan has returned to the lagoons at the Palace of Fine Arts after a tough year that found her brother murdered by vandals

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Kris G.
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« Reply #6 on: 05-Jan-11, 11:48:49 AM »

Good news for a change!    clap
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