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Can a Wild Turkey Find Success and Happiness in the Canyons of Manhattan?
NT Times ^ | May 23, 2003 | THOMAS J. LUECK

Posted on 05/23/2003 7:41:23 PM PDT by Pharmboy


Art Lindenauer
A female turkey visiting a 28th-floor
balcony on West 70th Street on
April 20. She appears to be the first of
her kind to make a go of it in
Manhattan's parks and airways.

Much about this bird is a mystery.

For starters, why did it take flight over Manhattan? Where did it come from? Is it alone?

One thing is clear.

"It's definitely a wild turkey," said E. J. McAdams, executive director of New York City Audubon, which has documented sightings of the bird from the Upper West Side to Chelsea and Greenwich Village since February. "And it's a talented turkey at that."

Several other witnesses, lacking Mr. McAdams's ornithological insight, have been just as impressed.

"The thing scared me to death," said Art Lindenauer, a retired chemical engineer who encountered the turkey in April on the balcony of his 28th-floor apartment on West 70th Street. Mr. Lindenauer has photographs of the turkey at rest, walking along the balcony railing, and taking flight.

By all accounts, the wild turkey sightings apparently are a first in the center of Manhattan. Few species would seem less likely inhabitants of an urban core, considering the wild turkey's ungainly size, its native habitat in woods, mountains and swamps, and its diet of berries, nuts and insects.

But its arrival is not altogether surprising, given that birds and animals have been making their way into densely populated areas across the nation.

A coyote was found in Central Park in 1999, not far from where a pair of red-tailed hawks have nested on a luxury apartment building at Fifth Avenue and 74th Street. Bears, not yet spotted in Manhattan, have been spotted in the suburbs, feeding from garbage cans and lumbering across yards.

Wild turkeys, long a beguiling sight along back roads and stone walls in the country, have been moving steadily to the suburbs and the fringes of the boroughs.

Several have been spotted in recent years in Pelham Bay Park, in the Bronx Zoo, on Staten Island and in Inwood Hill Park at the northern tip of Manhattan.

The turkey that has been spotted this year in Manhattan is clearly a female: she is smaller and less colorful than a male and lacks a male's wattles.

"The population all around is so healthy, I would not be surprised to see one or two turkeys wander into Manhattan each year," said Greg Butcher, an ornithologist and director of citizen science for the National Audubon Society. "Turkeys are going to want woods and fields, and New York City parks provide them," he said, "but I would be surprised to see a self-sustaining population in Manhattan."

Not everyone is convinced that a wild turkey could find its way into the center of Manhattan on its own.

"If it's real, I'd say it was assisted into the city by some person," said Stephanie Easter, director of dispatch for the city's Center for Animal Care and Control, which rescues injured animals and birds.

"We've never seen one in Manhattan," she said, "and I don't think the average person in this city knows what a wild turkey looks like."

John Rowden, the curator of animals at the Central Park Zoo, said that no one had yet reported a wild turkey in his park but that recent sightings in the Bronx and Inwood might explain how one or more was spotted near the Hudson River on the West Side.

"Turkeys are not great dispersers or fliers," he said, adding that they rarely range much over 12 miles. Even their limited flying abilities would allow turkeys to cross the narrow expanse of the Harlem River from the Bronx, find their way to the Hudson and migrate down its shoreline, he said.

That appears to fit the pattern. Mr. McAdams, of the city's Audubon Society chapter, said the first two sightings were in February and mid-April, when what seems to have been the same bird was spotted trotting in the West 60's between West End Avenue and the West Side Drive.

Then, on April 20, came Mr. Lindenauer's encounter on his 28th-floor balcony, in the Lincoln Towers apartment complex, just off West End Avenue. He said he spotted the turkey leaning against his living room window, as if she were taking a nap.

Mr. Lindenauer, who was at home with his wife, Jinx, a sculptor, said he tapped on the window to get the turkey's attention. The bird stood up reluctantly, he said, and walked along the railing, posing for photographs for 15 minutes or so before she took off.

That episode has mystified bird experts, who say turkeys have not been known to fly as high as the 28th floor.

"They are not vertical fliers," said Mr. Butcher, the ornithologist. "You will see them maybe 20 feet up in trees, but not 100 feet. I'd say that turkey went up an elevator."

Mr. Lindenauer insisted that the turkey was not planted on his balcony. Mr. McAdams said she could have made her way to the 28th floor by flying up from balcony to balcony, like an elevator making all the stops.

The next recorded sighting, by a reporter, was on May 7, when a female wild turkey roosted quietly in the upper branches of a London plane tree in front of an elegant row of landmark-district brownstones on West 21st Street, between 9th and 10th Avenues.

During the next few days, the turkey became a familiar sight on nearby Chelsea blocks.

"Lots of us saw it," said Lenny Kesselman, owner of the London True Value Hardware store on Ninth Avenue near 22nd Street.

The turkey gave her longest performance on May 8 on the lush grounds of the General Theological Seminary of the Episcopal Church, which fill the block bounded by 9th and 10th Avenues and 20th and 21st Streets.

Toni Daniels, the seminary's director of enrollment management, said she saw the turkey standing outside her office window early that morning. "A faculty member came in saying it must be a buzzard, and I thought it was a peahen," she recalled.

Before long, the bird was identified by seminarians from the South who had seen turkeys at home.

"It just strutted around here for three or four hours, then flew over the wall and was gone," Ms. Daniels said. Her colleagues started referring to the turkey as Glorvina, after Glorvina Rossell Hoffman, a particularly generous seminary benefactor in the 1800's.

In the most recent sighting, Mr. McAdams said he saw what he believed to be the same turkey on Monday in Greenwich Village. She was roosting casually on top of a garage on Barrow Street, between Washington and West Streets, he said.

Back on the Upper West Side, Mr. Lindenauer said he held little hope of a return visit. But he has named his balcony, instead of the bird, in honor of the April 20 encounter. The question is whether he did so while thinking of Thanksgiving.

"I've decided," he said, "to call it the Butterball Roost."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; US: New York
KEYWORDS: manhattan; wildturkeys
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Someone let her go...no way did this hen find her way to NYC
1 posted on 05/23/2003 7:41:24 PM PDT by Pharmboy
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To: Pharmboy
New York, New York. "If you can make it there you can make it anywhere"


2 posted on 05/23/2003 7:43:56 PM PDT by BenLurkin (Socialism is slavery.)
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To: Pharmboy
Mr. Lindenauer insisted that the turkey was not planted on his balcony. Mr. McAdams said she could have made her way to the 28th floor by flying up from balcony to balcony, like an elevator making all the stops.

Stupid turkey wanna be an eagle?

3 posted on 05/23/2003 7:43:56 PM PDT by The Red Zone
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To: Pharmboy
The NY turkey population has obviously increased. They're all over the place in the NY Capital District. It appears that there is a shortage of hunters. The deer population has also increased. (I don't think they'll get to the 28th floor). In all probability someone is playing games. This turkey was probably caught north of NYC and released in the city as a prank.
4 posted on 05/23/2003 7:54:04 PM PDT by Bringbackthedraft
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To: Pharmboy
I find it believable. Who would of thought that parrots from Argentina could survive and breed in NYC?

A snow-covered Quaker parakeet nest rests atop a utility pole in Brooklyn. The parakeets live communally in these nests all over the Flatbush neighborhood in Brooklyn.

http://www.nynewsday.com/entertainment/custom/pets/nyc-birds0209,0,1292638.story?coll=nyc-pets-headlines (Photo by Scout Tufankjian)

5 posted on 05/23/2003 7:59:48 PM PDT by katnip
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To: Pharmboy
cluck cluck cluck cluck....gooblegooble...BOOM!

Ahhh Thanksgiving...

6 posted on 05/23/2003 8:03:09 PM PDT by Dan from Michigan ("It's the same ole story, same ole song and dance, my friend")
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To: Pharmboy
They eat insects. Manhattan has enough cockroaches to feed an almost infinite number of turkeys.
How did it get there? It flew. Unlike domestic birds, wild turkeys fly well.
I find the coyote a lot more inexplicable.

So9

7 posted on 05/23/2003 8:20:42 PM PDT by Servant of the Nine (A Goldwater Republican)
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To: BenLurkin
Ted Nugent was on the radio here in Dallas the other morning and he had just returned from hunting wild turkey here in Texas. He stated that there are more turkeys in the State of Texas than there were when we became a country.

The explosion of wildlife in this country has gone crazy and if the anit-hunting group gets their way many cities will have deer and turkey problems.

8 posted on 05/23/2003 8:26:24 PM PDT by LittleRedRooster
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To: Servant of the Nine
How did it get there? It flew. Unlike domestic birds, wild turkeys fly well.

Indeed. They're also likely to turn up in strange places. I recently encountered an ENORMOUS male wild turkey sitting right near the curb near a very busy intersection. It had recently snowed, and the bird was just...sitting there, apparently unfazed by the traffic. When I got home I called the Humane Society. They said that that sort of thing happens from time to time. They had someone already out there, chasing the thing around.

Out here in the Plains, as the cities and suburbs reach further out into the landscape, we wind up taking over a lot of the spaces where the animals live. After a while, a lot of them get fed up with being run out of their places and move back in. There was a deer that decided to take a stroll in the Omaha airport terminal just last week in fact.

I find the coyote a lot more inexplicable.

Coulda been sick, coulda just worked its way back in from the forests. Coyotes, being dogs, are extremely adaptable. Central Park is a big patch of land, and there are doubtless plenty of stray and wild prey for a single animal. Similarly, foxes are quite happy to live in urban areas - England in particular is awash in urban foxes.

Snidely

9 posted on 05/23/2003 8:38:46 PM PDT by Snidely Whiplash
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To: Pharmboy
Can a Wild Turkey make it in New York?
YES! In a bottle right next to the Thunderbird.
10 posted on 05/23/2003 9:52:37 PM PDT by Ruy Dias de Bivar
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To: farmfriend
Here is one for you to ponder...
11 posted on 05/23/2003 9:58:55 PM PDT by tubebender ((?))
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To: Servant of the Nine
Correct. Two-legged or six-legged, plenty of both. I wouldn't wonder at all that the turkey hen (the 'turkette'??) did quite well.
12 posted on 05/23/2003 10:12:46 PM PDT by SAJ
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To: tubebender; Snidely Whiplash; Servant of the Nine
There is actually a Turkey Crossing sign just up the road from my house. No, I do not live in the country.
13 posted on 05/23/2003 10:16:29 PM PDT by farmfriend ( Isaiah 55:10,11)
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To: LittleRedRooster
'WILL have'??

Pardon me for asserting that your use of the FUTURE tense is utterly false-to-fact. Sundry deer are hit/run over/otherwise a problem daily here in even the INNER suburbs of STL, MO.

I'm thinking of borrowing a friend's F-150, fitted with a front end heavy screen, and harvesting one on the belt highway (I-270). But, I probably won't -- doubtless there are too many forms to fill out.

14 posted on 05/23/2003 10:21:18 PM PDT by SAJ
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To: Pharmboy
I have turkeys on my property in Nashville proper and coyotes are a scourge. When I lived in Miami, I had coyote in my yard in Coral Gables...a long way from the boonies.

I have seen turkeys roost much higher than 20 foot up in Mississippi swamps...more like 100 foot or so in loblollys.
15 posted on 05/23/2003 10:22:32 PM PDT by wardaddy (Your momma said I was a loser, a deadend cruiser and deep inside I knew that she was right)
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To: farmfriend
One day about 4 years ago my wife called me to say there was a Turkey in our yard. It was gone when I got home but the next day it was back. I called animal control because I thought it was someones pet. The officer doubted our knowledge of a turkey discription so I took some pictures and left them at her office. She called and was so excited that she spent an hour here looking at the bird.It was her first turkey. LOL
16 posted on 05/23/2003 10:25:35 PM PDT by tubebender ((?))
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To: Pharmboy
The object on the railing under the Turkey looks like a Whirly Bird. I wonder if the Gobbler thought he found a mate ?
17 posted on 05/23/2003 10:29:47 PM PDT by tubebender ((?))
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To: Snidely Whiplash
Central Park is a big patch of land, and there are doubtless plenty of stray and wild prey for a single animal.

Yep, but my surprise is at a coyote comming out into the open enough to cross a bridge or pass thru a tunnel to get to Manhattan.

So9

18 posted on 05/23/2003 10:50:42 PM PDT by Servant of the Nine (A Goldwater Republican)
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Kelp kelp kelp


19 posted on 05/24/2003 12:11:15 AM PDT by spectr17
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To: Pharmboy
Can a Wild Turkey Find Success and Happiness in the Canyons of Manhattan?

I don't know...how's Bubba doing up there?

20 posted on 05/24/2003 12:15:33 AM PDT by RichInOC (...somebody had to say it...)
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