Water Garden | Falcons, Hawk Ward Off Gulls And Pigeons At Santa Monica Complex

In fact, the gull was watching for a hawk, not to mention the three falcons perched next to the man-made lake in the center of the Water Garden in Santa Monica.

The gull let out a loud screech and kept on flying when it spotted the four birds of prey.

“He’s letting the other gulls know we’re still here,” said Fred Seaman, a falconer hired by the office complex to rid its 17-acre site of messy gulls and pigeons. “This is falconry-based bird abatement – we stop short of actually killing anything.”

It didn’t take much for gulls and pigeons to get the message. At lunchtime when office workers scattered around the pond to munch on sandwiches, not a single one was in sight.

“We’re here to haze and harass the gulls. The beach is over there, a trash transfer station is over here and this water is in between,” Seaman said. “They eat the trash that people have had in their cans for a week then come here to drink and take a bath.”

Seaman, 53, of Cambria, was in the first week of what could be a two-month effort by his Airstrike Bird Control company to retrain a generation of gulls to hang out somewhere other than the Water Garden.

“The first morning I got here there were 40 gulls. Some days they’ve had as many as 100 of them here. This pond is a place they feel safe – it’s wide enough for them to get a running start to take off,” he said of the 1 1/2-acre lake.

“But the grassy areas and sidewalks were white from their droppings. There are bone fragments from their scavenging that end up on the ground and in the water. Building management had to tell people not to dangle their feet in the water because they couldn’t put enough chlorine in it to clean it.”

Gulls and pigeons “have intensely good eyesight,” and they know to stay away from hawks and falcons, which are natural enemies, he said.

Seaman keeps his birds tethered to 10-pound blocks to keep them from flying off and landing in harm’s way in the congested area around 26th Street and Olympic Boulevard.

He allows older ones to fly in the evening and early morning, however. They are equipped with tiny transmitters that Seaman can use to track them if they get disoriented by the unfamiliar surroundings of Santa Monica. But they always respond to his call

Click here to view rest of article from original site

  • Share/Bookmark
This entry was posted on Wednesday, August 31st, 2011 at 4:26 am and is filed under Garden. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

Post a Comment



Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes