The Province

Crows can be murder for unwary pedestrian­s

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Cantankero­us crows are dive bombing unwary pedestrian­s in Metro Vancouver as the annual example of avian helicopter parenting hits its height.

Jim O’Leary, an instructor at Langara College, has been tracking crow-human interactio­ns using an online map as part of his work with the college’s geographic informatio­n systems program and says the assaults are increasing.

Between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning, O’Leary says 68 people added their reports of crow confrontat­ions to the interactiv­e online map he and a colleague created in 2016.

He says June figures are higher than usual, possibly because March and April were cool and wet, delaying nesting and the crows’ territoria­l feints, flutters and outright airborne assaults that come with it.

O’Leary says the soaring number of reports this week suggests eggs have hatched and some of the chicks may even be fledging from the nest, making parents especially aggressive because their young can’t yet fly.

Wearing a hat or using an umbrella can fend off some swoops but O’Leary says the map shows avoiding blocks with tall thick trees, where nests are likely to be hidden, or staying clear of trouble spots in the West End or downtown are THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 2018 THEPROVINC­E.COM | also good ideas. Those areas are full of food sources like garbage cans or grub dropped on restaurant patios.

The attacks can be terrifying, O’Leary says, because reports on his site reveal they come from behind, without warning.

“I have had reports where people said, ‘My neck was sore for two weeks because the crow slammed into the side of my head,’ ” O’Leary says.

 ??  ?? A crow swoops in on an unsuspecti­ng man in Vancouver.
A crow swoops in on an unsuspecti­ng man in Vancouver.

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