Saturday, April 18, 2009
Friday, April 17, 2009
A Parrot's Nest Grew In Brooklyn, And Queens Too

Fighting Real Parrots With a Fake Owl
By COREY KILGANNON and JEFFREY E. SINGER
Published April 17, 2009 in New York Times
Many of Con Edison’s challenges are well known — blackouts and steam pipe explosions included — but a lesser-known problem has proved no less nagging: How to protect its equipment from the thousands of monk parakeets that nest in the utility poles of Queens and Brooklyn.
These birds — also called monk parrots or Quaker parrots — are attracted to the heat given off by the transformers and other equipment high up on the utility poles. Their nests often wreck the electrical equipment by engulfing the electrical devices and blocking ventilation.
The resulting trapped heat can cause the devices to short-circuit and often, to catch fire, sometimes leading to local power failures. Con Edison officials have tried to shoo the birds with nets, spikes, deterrent sprays and sound machines.
“None have been successful,” said Al Williams, a senior scientist with Con Ed who tracks the monk parakeet, a native of South America. According to the prevailing theory, the birds escaped from cargo at Kennedy International Airport and now proliferate mostly in Brooklyn and Queens, with perhaps 300 nests that cause “a tremendous cost” to Con Edison, Mr. Williams said. In eight fires on overhead equipment in past 18 months, the nests are the main suspects.
One Con Edison crew has come up with its own solution: a plastic, battery-powered owl that swivels its head and makes a hooting noise, bought right at a local nursery.
The idea came from Gerry Goodwin, 65, a 44-year Con Edison veteran who tired of continually replacing the 24,000-volt feeder enclosure on a pole on 11th Avenue, just off Clintonville Street in Whitestone, Queens, which has become a main parakeet habitat, along with Canarsie and Midwood in Brooklyn.
“These things cost about $20,000 to replace, and we’ve gone through five in the past couple years,” Mr. Goodwin said of the feeder enclosures. “These nests are killing us.” Pondering the problem, Mr. Goodwin recalled that a co-worker had installed a plastic owl on his boat to keep seagulls away.
“I figured, ‘If it works for seagulls, it’ll work for parakeets; let’s put one up on the equipment,’ ” Mr. Goodwin said. So last year, they bought an owl and named him Hootie.
Hootie worked like a charm. Months went by with no new nests. But suddenly the nests were back, and the crew was back again to replace the equipment.
“Hootie’s batteries went dead,” Mr. Goodwin said. The birds immediately detected him as a fake and built their nest next to him.
“I think one of them married Hootie,” joked Sam Maratto, a Con Edison supervisor. Last week, the equipment exploded and caught fire, ruining Hootie. The fire was caused by nests, Mr. Maratto said. Mr. Goodwin went up in a cherry picker to retrieve the damaged owl, then called Mr. Maratto, who drove to a nearby a nursery and bought another one.
On the way, Mr. Maratto pointed out some huge nests in the area. When the nests become wet, he said, they conduct electricity and cause the devices to short-circuit and explode.
“They’re all over, and they’re huge,” he said, referring to the nests. He stopped at a device on a pole near Seventh Avenue and 150th Street “smothered” by a huge nest.
“Look at that capacitor bank — it’s a condominium,” he said. “It’s engulfed. That’s a piece of Con Ed equipment; you can’t even see it.”
The men said working in Whitestone had given them double duty as parrot home wreckers (though parrot sympathizers should know that the birds rebuild their homes within several days). When working on nest-infested equipment, Con Ed workers must wear special protective suits and face masks.
“These birds don’t go easy,” said one worker, Patrick Chery. “They hover right around you, and if they have eggs in the nest, they’ll attack you.”
Mr. Goodwin said that the Hootie solution seemed like the way to go citywide, except for the need to change the batteries every few months. He has asked Con Edison engineers to come up with a way to feed low-voltage direct current from the lines to power the owls.
Last week, Mr. Chery mounted the new Hootie. Within minutes, a parakeet flew over to take a look.
Steve Baldwin, who runs BrooklynParrots.com, a Web site devoted to chronicling the wild urban parakeets, said the parakeets have strong instincts to return to their original nesting spot. They will not be fooled for too long by a plastic owl, he said. A better solution might be using recorded hawk calls to deter the parakeets, he added, and providing “alternate nest platforms” on poles.
“I know there are people who think Con Edison is killing them, but I think they’re pretty humane about removing the nests,” he said. “It would be nice if, on our Con Ed bills, there was a box you could check to donate $5 for humane monk parakeet nest removal.”
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Be sure to check out the BrooklynParrots.com site. There are some pics of nests hoarding a steeple at The Green-Wood Cemetery. They also keep up with legislation aimed at protecting the birds, and other updates of interest.
Monday, April 6, 2009
Ybor City's Finest

Columbia, the restaurant was founded in 1905 by a Cuban immigrant in the Ybor City section of Tampa, Florida. It is the state's largest and oldest Spanish-American resturant. I ate at the Columbia in St. Petersburg. Had the Mojito Chicken which came with a rice unlike I've ever tasted, as well as fresh homemade bread that melted in the mouth.
(photo taken with cell phone in Ybor City)
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Whistling Outside The Church
Here are some of the greatest from the recent Rio Grande Sun police blotter.
Monday, March 9
• 4:30 p.m. — A North Orchard Drive caller said a possibly demented old woman was in his garage grabbing beers out of his fridge. She refused to be transported by police.
Thursday, March 12
• 5:44 p.m. — A County Road 59A caller said someone threw a bag of meat into her yard in an attempt to poison her dog. No report was taken
Sunday, March 15
• 4:42 a.m. — A caller said someone was whistling outside Holy Cross Catholic Church. Police found the door open and secured it.
Monday, March 9
• 4:30 p.m. — A North Orchard Drive caller said a possibly demented old woman was in his garage grabbing beers out of his fridge. She refused to be transported by police.
Thursday, March 12
• 5:44 p.m. — A County Road 59A caller said someone threw a bag of meat into her yard in an attempt to poison her dog. No report was taken
Sunday, March 15
• 4:42 a.m. — A caller said someone was whistling outside Holy Cross Catholic Church. Police found the door open and secured it.
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Charlie Coley Dunks
I got to see Charlie Coley, a 6'7'' senior at UNC Charlotte play ball on the court today. He will be particpating in the NCAA Slam Dunk Championship this weekend in Detroit.
Friday, March 27, 2009
The Virtues of Benjamin Weissman
I first stumbled across Dear Dead Person by Benjamin Weissman in an Ivy League town bookstore I thought sold only used books but had new books at discounted prices. I flipped through a few pages and thought it'd be something I liked. And I indeed did. Now it sits high on the bookshelf where prying children fingers cannot reach.
I only recently obtained his 2004 book, Headless, but remember some reviews of it here and there when it came out. It seems to me Weissman has never been a huge blip on the commercial radar, unfortunately. In a marketplace where potty humor, silly violence, awkward sexual situations and good profanity is bankable, Weissman's work gracefully glides through unscathed.
Headless is known for it's opening piece, Hitler Ski Story. A quote lifted from another blog claims this to be a Weissman quote...
"Initially, I wanted to write that story from the perspective of a Hitler historian, under the premise that there was new information about Hitler having been a lousy skier, which is sort of the ultimate insult for a Tyrolean. But after seeing photographs of Hitler in the Alps, I couldn’t help but imagine his experience trying to ski. Maybe putting him on skis makes him an easy target for parody and humiliation."
His prose style is something I relate to. It is hard for his reader not to feel connected. The voice of his stories feel like it is a close friend that is telling you something he can and will only tell you. He tells you secrets, like in The Fecality of it All, or in the first book, Time Bomb, where he says, "The mating ritual can be so complicated. I tell her I want to be inside her now. I heard that in a porn film and it drove the actress crazy."
An appealing aspect to me of his work is that the stories are typically very short, just a few pages in length to 10 pages or so. Weissman typically dives right into a story and all you see is guts, the action of the narrative as it unfolds upon you and like that, he hits his point and the story closes. Simple. Swift. Just right.
You can read the book on Google Books HERE.
Read a short interview with Weissman HERE.
I only recently obtained his 2004 book, Headless, but remember some reviews of it here and there when it came out. It seems to me Weissman has never been a huge blip on the commercial radar, unfortunately. In a marketplace where potty humor, silly violence, awkward sexual situations and good profanity is bankable, Weissman's work gracefully glides through unscathed.
Headless is known for it's opening piece, Hitler Ski Story. A quote lifted from another blog claims this to be a Weissman quote...
"Initially, I wanted to write that story from the perspective of a Hitler historian, under the premise that there was new information about Hitler having been a lousy skier, which is sort of the ultimate insult for a Tyrolean. But after seeing photographs of Hitler in the Alps, I couldn’t help but imagine his experience trying to ski. Maybe putting him on skis makes him an easy target for parody and humiliation."
His prose style is something I relate to. It is hard for his reader not to feel connected. The voice of his stories feel like it is a close friend that is telling you something he can and will only tell you. He tells you secrets, like in The Fecality of it All, or in the first book, Time Bomb, where he says, "The mating ritual can be so complicated. I tell her I want to be inside her now. I heard that in a porn film and it drove the actress crazy."
An appealing aspect to me of his work is that the stories are typically very short, just a few pages in length to 10 pages or so. Weissman typically dives right into a story and all you see is guts, the action of the narrative as it unfolds upon you and like that, he hits his point and the story closes. Simple. Swift. Just right.
You can read the book on Google Books HERE.
Read a short interview with Weissman HERE.
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Monday, March 23, 2009
Monday, March 16, 2009
April Art Show in Lancaster
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Cops & Ice Cream Cones
I saw two obese policemen in white shirts eating vanilla ice cream cones at Dairy Queen.
Monday, March 9, 2009
John Milius wrote it. We repeat it.
There is an excellent story on John Milius over at CNN. You may not know the name but you surely know his work.
"You know that line in 'Dirty Harry' in which Clint Eastwood's Harry Callahan describes the power of the .44 Magnum? John Milius wrote that line.
Remember the line in 'Jaws' when Robert Shaw, playing the shark hunter, talks about his buddies being eaten alive by sharks during World War II? That was Milius.
How about the line in 'Apocalypse Now,' when Robert Duvall, playing a surf-loving Army colonel, says 'I love the smell of napalm in the morning?'
Milius again."
He is also the guy who is said to be the inspiration for the Walter character in The Big Lebowski. I dig that Milius applauds the screenplays of Paul Thomas Anderson. I wonder who brought the name up during the interview though, Milius or the reporter? Either way, is good.
And for those who are despising Rush Limbaugh for his recent comments. Milius, an out and about conservative, says the GOP loudmouth should be "drawn and quartered."
"You know that line in 'Dirty Harry' in which Clint Eastwood's Harry Callahan describes the power of the .44 Magnum? John Milius wrote that line.
Remember the line in 'Jaws' when Robert Shaw, playing the shark hunter, talks about his buddies being eaten alive by sharks during World War II? That was Milius.
How about the line in 'Apocalypse Now,' when Robert Duvall, playing a surf-loving Army colonel, says 'I love the smell of napalm in the morning?'
Milius again."
He is also the guy who is said to be the inspiration for the Walter character in The Big Lebowski. I dig that Milius applauds the screenplays of Paul Thomas Anderson. I wonder who brought the name up during the interview though, Milius or the reporter? Either way, is good.
And for those who are despising Rush Limbaugh for his recent comments. Milius, an out and about conservative, says the GOP loudmouth should be "drawn and quartered."
Thursday, March 5, 2009
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