From: Pam Niedermayer (pam@pinehill.com)
Date: 09/10/02-12:43:16 PM Z
Yes, I know, lived on the east coast until 3 years ago. How can natural
predators get to geese who live on lawns because they no longer have the
natural habitat? It's truly a vicious circle. Maybe we should start by
allowing golf clubs to whack them?
Pam
Judy Seigel wrote:
On Mon, 9 Sep 2002, Pam Niedermayer wrote:
> As to the geese in Chicago, that problem, too, is a result of population
> explosion, ours. Used to be the geese had plenty of non-metropolitan
> places to be; but no more, not for 20 years now. They, too, just want to
> survive.
>
Actually Pam, those Canadian geese are a serious problem through the east
as well. My understanding is that it's due to the loss of natural
predators and the excess of the kind of territory (lawns, cultivated
waterways) that they thrive on, also laws that prevent human predation.
The geese population has exploded, and various parks & fields become
unusable, in fact killed through their excrement.
J.
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