Nothing to crow about
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Alex Coolman
The team that took the field at Eastbluff Park was wearing black.
The players -- about a dozen of them -- spread out across the baseball
diamond as if getting ready to take infield practice.
But these weren’t athletes.
They were crows.
They were big, black birds that didn’t seem to have much to do besides
peck around in the grass, take an occasional trip up into the trees and
emit their characteristic cawing. They could be heard for blocks.
Some residents say that in recent months, the crow population seems to
have increased. And they worry about the effects the creatures are having
on the area -- from the rising volume on the soundtrack of background
cawing to the way the black birds rummage through the garbage cans on
trash day.
“We’re dealing with a very intelligent animal,” said Newport Beach
animal control officer Jamye Rogers, who said she had noticed an
“explosion” in the visibility of the birds. “It’s on the level of a
dolphin and a monkey in intelligence.”
Crows have an easy time of it in this area. They have no natural
predators, Rogers said, and as omnivores they have tremendous supplies of
food in local garbage bins.
Philip Glaser, conservation chairman of the Laguna Hills Audubon
Society, said he had seen an increase in crow activity throughout the
county.
Glaser attributed the proliferation of the noisy birds, at least in
part, to a gradual increase in the availability of junk food waste and
road kill.
“They thrive on what’s happening to Orange County,” he said.
In Eastbluff Village Center on Monday, the opinions of shoppers seemed
split on whether the crow situation was improving or whether the
“ungainly fowl” was getting the upper hand on the community.
One Costa Mesa resident said she started having her newspaper
delivered in plastic bags because crows ate the first four pages every
morning.
But Joy St. Dennis, of Newport Beach, said she had seen fewer black
wings flapping through the air of late. And that was OK with her.
“I hate crows,” she noted.
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