HuntingNet.com Forums - View Single Post - When Turkeys Attack!
View Single Post
Old 03-22-2006 | 09:27 AM
  #5  
RayC
 
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 204
Likes: 0
From: W Suffield Ct
Default RE: When Turkeys Attack!

RI's not the only place it happens, this is part of an article from here in CT last month, one town north of state capital:

In an unrelated incident, police were forced to shoot three turkeys last week that were terrorizing a neighborhood near Clover Street elementary school.

Capt. Thomas LePore said police began receiving reports that the turkeys were acting aggressively toward residents and mail carriers in late January.

One postal worker doused a turkey with pepper spray to no avail, while another used a garbage pail to defend himself, LePore said. The turkeys were also chasing children, LePore said.

He said police received about six complaints, the last on Feb. 13, when an officer shot three of the turkeys. All of the complaints occurred in the Clover Street neighborhood, he said.

On Feb. 1, LePore said a fourth-grade student at Clover Street school was chased by a pack of turkeys, which so "terrified this youngster" that the student fled into a stranger's minivan.

That woman, who LePore called a "concerned person," called police reporting the turkeys were "vicious" and looking into the minivan, according to LePore.

Police contacted a DEP turkey expert, who advised officers to "harass" the turkeys to scare them away.

The expert told police the turkeys were likely migrating due to the changing season - and that it was common for male turkeys during this season, which is their mating season, to act aggressively in an effort to show off.

He said turkeys are less fearful of humans in some cases because people feed them during the winter, making the animals more comfortable around people.

If the turkeys did not respond to harassment - which LePore described as waving one's arms and making noise - police were advised to kill them, LePore said.

"If (the harassing) doesn't work, where someone's at risk, really the only thing is for law enforcement to... destroy the animals," LePore said.

On Feb. 13, an officer was in the area on unrelated business when they saw three turkeys chasing a mail carrier, LePore said.

The officer tried to shoe the turkeys away, LePore said, but the animals disappeared briefly only to return.

That prompted the officer to shoot all three turkeys on the street, LePore said. The animals were disposed of at the landfill in town, LePore said.

While LePore said the officer acted properly by executing the turkeys, he added future run-ins with the birds would likely be handled differently.

"The Windsor police will most likely not take the action of actually putting them down," LePore said. "We will most likely let the Department of Environmental Protection handle that."

He added that authorities were still unclear exactly who had statutory authority to kill the turkeys.

May said that in an emergency, where someone appears in danger, local law enforcement has the authority to kill a wild animal before calling upon DEP.

There are more than 30,000 turkeys in the state and a limited number of conservation officers who can respond in a timely fashion, May explained.

"This is a very typical issue for suburban towns these days," May said, noting that most of the complaints DEP gets lately is over wild turkeys.

It's uncommon to have turkeys attacking people, but not rare, May said, and when it happens it's always the same type of situation.

This time of year the young toms are entering their first mating season with a rush of hormones and they begin by fighting amongst themselves for domination of the flock and sometimes its gets carried over to people - typically small children and the frail or elderly, May said.

A mature tom weighs about 25 pounds and stands three feet tall, he said.

"I've seen cases where they jump up, flap their wings and try to kick people," May said.

A lot of it could be avoided if people stopped feeding wild turkeys or try to tame them, May said.

"We recommend that police encourage folks to not feed them, try to scare them away, and if all else fails, it's okay with us to destroy them," May said.

Mating season can go for several months, primarily during April or May, he said, adding that the Windsor turkeys were "getting an early start."


RayC is offline  
Reply