Nature calls at the Home Depot
"Mutual of Omahaâs Wild Kingdom" meets "Trading Places". Hat tip: Drudge.
One visitor to Home Depot has been hunting for more than home improvement items. A Cooperâs hawk has been flying above the stocked shelves at a suburban Cleveland store for more than a week while feeding on pigeons that live in the rafters. The brown birdâs three-foot wing span casts a moving shadow across the concrete floor, causing customers and workers to duck and cock their heads toward the 25-foot ceiling.
Time to break out the extra-large no-pest strips.
The hawk entered the store through an open door while chasing a pigeon last Saturday. It caught its prey above the electrical aisle, worker Craig Warth said. Witnesses saw the hawk rip the pigeon apart and feed until nothing was left but feathers and claws. "It wasnât a pretty sight," said Terry McGuire, assistant manager. "Some of the customers were upset. Some said it was the neatest thing they had ever seen."
"Clean up on aisle 3!"
Workers said about 15 pigeons were living in the store, but since the hawk arrived, few are left. Cooperâs hawks are a protected species, so the bird canât be harmed or killed. Local wildlife experts say the hawk will likely leave when the pigeons are digested gone.
Posted by: Dar 2004-02-25 |