http://www.nbc11.com/news/9946298/detail.html?rss=bay&psp=news
(Can't you just see the evil glint in its eye?)
So, which gun would be best for clearing a park of agressive squirrels?
Besides, within a year the squirrel population will likely recover, but they will likely be more shy.
(Can't you just see the evil glint in its eye?)
So, which gun would be best for clearing a park of agressive squirrels?
Okay, My suggestion: Send a group of vollunteers who are decent shots through the park with .22 pistols/rifles and bags of nuts. Any squirrel they see, shoot it. Collect the squirrels, skin them, and donate them to a local shelter or something. Squirrel and dumplins is good.MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. -- An aggressive squirrel pounced on a 4-year-old boy in an attack last week in Cuesta Park in Mountain View, Calif.
The attack happened as the boy's mother unwrapped a muffin during a picnic.
The boy had to get rabies shot after the attack. He is still getting the shots.
The attack is not the first one reported at the park.
Mountain View Community Services Director David Muela said that as many as six people have been bitten or scratched by squirrels since May, and that the attacks have become more ferocious in the last month.
In response to attacks, the city of Mountain View has announced it plans to start trapping and killing the aggressive tree squirrels.
Over the next three weeks, park workers will set tube-like traps in the trees of Cuesta Park and euthanize captured squirrels "in a humane way," said David Muela, Mountain View's community services director.
Ironically, efforts to curb the behavior may have exacerbated the squirrels' aggressive tendencies, Muela said.
This summer, the city installed new trash receptacles featuring metal tops with a latch that makes it nearly impossible for an animal to rummage through the can in search of food. Increased park ranger patrols and flier distributions cautioning against feeding the animals might have further cut the squirrels' food supply, prompting them to act more assertively in their quest for food.
NBC11 and NBC11.com first ran this story Wednesday and it stirred up a lot of outrage with viewers.
Many have e-mailed, saying that euthanizing the squirrels is the wrong response.
One viewer wrote, "I come to the parks to watch the wild animals, not the humans. I will no longer visit your parks knowing that any of them have become a killing ground for natural wildlife."
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Wildlife advocates also oppose the unusual measure of killing the animals and said it won't solve the problem.
"The squirrels will be back," South Bay wildlife rehabilitator Norma Campbell said. "For every one you take out, two more will come in. It could be a never-ending project that isn't going to accomplish anything."
Officials said the increasingly brazen behavior stems from years of being fed by park visitors.
The state Department of Fish and Game recommends against relocating habituated squirrels, he said, because their fear of humans has diminished and the problem is likely to remain. Instead, the department recommends the animals be put to sleep, Muela said.
Muela said the city couldn't afford to wait and see if the squirrels' aggressive behavior goes away eventually, because of the threat posed to public health and safety.
Emphasizing his concern for the welfare of park visitors, Muela said, "We will need the public's cooperation on this, because as long as they continue to feed the squirrels it will exacerbate the problem."
Although the squirrels' behavior has led some to fear the animals might be rabid, Muela said that is highly unlikely because incidents of rabid tree squirrels are extremely rare.
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Copyright 2006 by NBC11.com. Bay City News contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Besides, within a year the squirrel population will likely recover, but they will likely be more shy.