The Asian Age

Raptors come to rescue for people at Ocean City beach from hungry gulls

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The group of raptors — which includes falcons, Harris’s hawks and a Eurasian eagle-owl — have been patrolling Ocean City night and day this month as part of a new initiative to scare away pesky gulls. Although the raptors could easily kill the seagulls, they have been trained not to.

Ocean City: For years, tourists enjoying the picturesqu­e boardwalk in Ocean City, New Jersey have had to deal with some unwelcome visitors: marauding seagulls intent on stealing their lunch. “It’s not that pleasurabl­e to have to guard your food,” said Hilary Larkin, who has been vacationin­g at the seaside resort for 36 years.

“But that’s what you do because you know that there will be a bird there to have a little bite to eat,” she added. Well, not anymore, thanks to the introducti­on of Ozzy, Sage, Hank, Gabriela, OC and Blackberry — six hawkeyed birds of prey sent to keep hungry seagulls at bay.

The group of raptors — which includes falcons, Harris’s hawks and a Eurasian eagle-owl — have been patrolling Ocean City night and day this month as part of a new initiative to scare away pesky gulls. “Multiple raptors constantly on the boardwalk creates an environmen­t for seagulls where it is just not worth trying to steal a fry,” falconer PJ Simonis told AFP.

Ocean City, about 130 miles (200 kilometers) south of New York, welcomes 150,000 vacationer­s every summer. They come for the beaches, Atlantic Ocean views, and countless snack bars and ice cream stands. Thousands upon thousands of seagulls follow them, though, regularly swooping down to pluck French fries or funnel cake from the hands of unsuspecti­ng tourists, sometimes leaving children in tears.

The city’s government decided enough was enough and tasked East Coast Falcons — a group of falconers more used to protecting airports, farmland and landfill sites against invading birds — to do something about them.

Although the raptors could easily kill the seagulls, they have been trained not to. Blackberry, a three-year-old peregrine falcon does the morning shift, performing a wide sweep of the skies before returning to Simonis’s hand.

The Harris Hawks, native to the desert, work the afternoon when temperatur­es are high. Ozzy, the Eurasian eagle-owl, is from the Arctic and doesn’t like heat so he spends most of the day being cooled by air-conditioni­ng before undertakin­g a few laps after dark before the falconers head home at 11:00 pm.

In just three short weeks, most seagulls have got the message, heading back out to their natural habitat to scavenge for clams, crabs and mussels. Mayor Jay Gillian said in a post on his website this month that the scheme, which costs $2,100 a day, appeared to be working and could be renewed next summer.—

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