Canadian Geese Run Rampant On Long Island Long Island is experiencing more Canada goose problems this year than ever before. Admittedly, the last few weeks of winter always see the most geese in big flocks passing north use Long Island as a rest stop. They join the many thousands of birds that either winter here or that live year-round in the New York metro area. You must interested in
cheap canada goose jacketsLast week, we received numerous cries for help. Two calls came within an hour of each other from desperate householders. Over one hundred geese had turned up out of the blue a week before to foul their properties. One of the callers hadn't seen a goose on her property in seventeen years. We also received calls from another two Long Island-based organizations wanting urgent solutions to their geese problems. The deals were concluded within a few hours resulting in two more new customers for GEESE OFF!
Across the island people are reporting many more geese than usual - more flocks, larger flocks. GEESE OFF! is still fighting a sizable migrant flock of some 300 geese in Mill Neck on the north shore of Long Island. These birds come from northern Quebec. They spend every winter in and around Lattingtown, Mill Neck Bay, Oyster Bay and Centre Island. So the famous brand named
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Collared geese
How do we know where they're from? Simple - for the last six years we've been seeing some of this flock wearing peach-colored neck collars with large white numbers on them. We jot down the numbers and dial them into a special phone line for the US Fish & Wildlife Services department that deals with migratory bird counts. A few weeks later, we receive a certificate telling us where the geese were banded. The certificate gives the birds' sex, their age and the name of the wildlife biologist responsible for the banding. The man who bands the Mill Neck geese is a Quebecois. He captures and collars the birds up in the tundra during the summer molt when they cannot fly. All in all, we see about fifty geese with his collars.
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