Albuquerque Journal

Beloved NYC owl, Flaco, dies

Eurasian eagle-owl escaped Central Park Zoo enclosure a year ago, became a celebrity

- BY CAROLYN THOMPSON

Tributes poured in Saturday for Flaco, the beloved Eurasian eagleowl that became a feel-good New York story after escaping its Central Park Zoo enclosure and flying free around Manhattan.

Flaco was found dead on a New York City sidewalk Friday night after apparently flying into a building. It was a heartbreak­ing end for the birders who documented the owl’s daily movements and the legions of admirers who eagerly followed along.

“Everybody feels the same, they’re devastated,” said Nicole Blair, a New York City artist who devoted much of her feed on the X platform to photos and memes featuring the celebrity owl with checkerboa­rd black and brown feathers and round sunset-hued eyes.

Staff from the Wild Bird Fund, a wildlife rehabilita­tion center, declared Flaco dead shortly after the collision. A necropsy was expected on Saturday.

The normally vocal owl whose hours of hooting became a nightly song in the Upper West Side had been quieter in the days before his death, said David Barrett, who runs the Manhattan Bird Alert account on X and tracked reports of the owl’s activities.

Barrett had wondered whether Flaco had gone off to explore other neighborho­ods, but news of the death made him suspect he had become ill, he said Saturday.

“He hadn’t gone anywhere. He was just being quiet in his old neighborho­od and that, I say, suggests he was not well, he was not feeling up to hooting,” Barrett said.

Flaco was freed from his cage at the zoo a little over a year ago by a vandal who breached a waist-high fence and cut a hole through a steel mesh cage. The owl had arrived at the zoo as a fledgling 13 years earlier.

Flaco sightings soon became sport. The majestic owl with a nearly 6-foot wingspan spent his days perched on tree branches, fence posts and fire escapes and nights hooting atop water towers and preying on the city’s abundant rats.

Like a true celebrity, the owl appeared on murals and merchandis­e. A likeness occupied a spot on Blair’s New York City-themed Christmas tree, right next to “Pizza Rat,” the infamous rodent seen in a YouTube clip dragging a slice down a subway stairwell.

Flaco fans on Saturday shared suggestion­s for a permanent bronze statue overlookin­g New York City. One requested that the owl’s remains be buried in Central Park.

“Flaco the Owl was, in many ways, a typical New Yorker — fiercely independen­t, constantly exploring, finding ways to survive ever-changing challenges,” read a post on the X platform, reflecting a common sentiment. “He will be missed.”

Barrett said visitors were dropping by a temporary memorial at the owl’s favorite oak tree in the park to lay f lowers and share memories.

“Seeing an owl at all is special,” he said. “Seeing an owl well, consistent­ly day after day, that’s quite a special thing. And that’s something Flaco delivered.”

 ?? SETH WENIG/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Eurasian eagle-owl Flaco sits in a tree in New York’s Central Park in February 2023.
SETH WENIG/ASSOCIATED PRESS Eurasian eagle-owl Flaco sits in a tree in New York’s Central Park in February 2023.

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