Seacoast Connects
Portsmouth Herald - Hampton Union - Exeter News-Letter - Dover Community News - Rockingham News - York County Coast Star - The York Weekly
  Advertise - Contact Info - Email Headlines - Home Delivery Specials - Place a Classified Ad - Submit Announcements - Site Map
Strange But True printPrint Story  emailEmail Story  discuss Discuss Story
» More Strange but True

Hawk, escaped lamb roam NYC streets
By Associated Press
Posted:  June 14, 2007

PHOTO

'Lucky Lady,' a seven month-old lamb found wandering around in the Bronx, poses for a portrait while eating in her temporary digs, a cage at Animal Care and Control of New York City, a rescue organization for animals in New York, Wednesday, June 13, 2007. Shelter director Liz Keller said the lamb caught a break. She apparently escaped from a live animal market where she would have been sold for food. Now she is bound for the sanctuary of a farm in upstate New York. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NEW YORK - A hawk down in midtown Manhattan? Another bird of prey grounded across town? A lamb on the lam in the Bronx? True. All in one day. The series of animal adventures began around 10 a.m. Wednesday when a former parks commissioner reported spotting a hawk that had crash landed. At about 11:30 a.m., several blocks away, came a report of another wounded bird, this time an American kestrel.

The birds were rescued by the Department of Parks and Recreation, which determined they were 7-week-old fledglings shaken up while testing their wings. Both were expected to recover and be returned to the wilds of Manhattan, where a growing population of birds of prey nests on high-rises and feasts on squirrels, rats and pigeons, said the current parks commissioner, Adrian Benepe.

"It's the season when birds are learning to fly, which is not easy to do in midtown," Benepe said.

Around 11 a.m. came a report of a sheep running around the Bronx. Police captured the female lamb and turned it over to an animal rescue organization, Animal Care & Control of New York City.

The 7-month-old lamb caught a break, said shelter manager Liz Keller. She apparently escaped from a live animal market, where she would have been sold for food. Now she's bound for a farm sanctuary elsewhere in New York state.

"The staff named her Lucky Lady," Keller said. "She's adorable."

Site Sponsor

Go to Seacoastonline!

Seacoast Online is owned and operated by Seacoast Media Group. Copyright © 2008 Seacoast Online. All rights reserved. SeacoastOnline.com Copyright Notice and Terms of Use. Seacoast Connects Terms and Services Seacoast Media Group is a subsidiary of Ottaway Newspapers, Inc., a Dow Jones Company.