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In His Battle With Pests, The Fun Is In The Arsenal

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  • In His Battle With Pests, The Fun Is In The Arsenal

    IN HIS BATTLE WITH PESTS, THE FUN IS IN THE ARSENAL
    by: Doug Struck, Washington Post Foreign Service

    The Washington Post
    December 17, 2006 Sunday
    Final Edition

    Dan Frankian peered over a city fence and saw his target. There,
    plump and oblivious, were the intruders. The freeloaders had simply
    moved in from the country, gorged themselves on the abundance of the
    city and left a nasty trail wherever they went. They were Canada geese.

    Frankian mulled over the tools at his command this day. Digger,
    looking expectantly from the front of his pickup truck, has been
    Frankian's loyal companion for 20 years. The springer spaniel is
    slowed by age but still game for a good chase.

    In the back of the truck was Cody, another spaniel, half Digger's
    age and just itching for a run. And finally, in a dark cage fashioned
    from a garbage pail, was his secret weapon: Clara.

    Clara is a 5-year-old Harris's hawk. If the Canada geese scorned the
    dogs, Clara could be loosened from a secure strap on Frankian's arm
    to take to the skies, to wreak terror on any avians below.

    "Usually, just the sight of a bird of prey will work," he said.

    For Frankian, who considers his company the SWAT team of pest
    controllers, the fun is in the arsenal. While most competitors do
    their work with some traps or fireworks or nets, Frankian and his
    Hawkeye Bird Control offer a full range of persuasive techniques.

    Like five dogs. More than 100 hawks and falcons. A few owls. And even
    three bald eagles -- "the big bang in bird control" -- which can be
    unleashed to reclaim the sky from unwanted wildlife.

    Toronto and its environs are rife with such wildlife, in the air and
    on the ground. The urban center lies on a major flyway for millions
    of Canada geese, swans, ducks and songbirds. They join the regular
    city slickers -- pigeons, and sea gulls from nearby Lake Ontario --
    to infest any available water and to foul parks, lawns and green space.

    The city also is overrun with raccoons, which gleefully feast on trash
    collection days despite a minor industry built around garbage can
    locking devices. The raccoons and squirrels often move inside homes
    for the winter, making holes under eaves. And not far from town,
    Canada's iconic beavers industriously rework streams to make lakes
    and chomp down forests into stumps.

    Frankian, 42, takes on all. Most pest control companies here are
    permitted only to cart a trapped raccoon, for example, for release
    a half-mile away, barely a commuter trip. James Bond-like, Frankian
    is licensed to kill in some circumstances. But he would rather not,
    he said.

    "If I can move an animal without killing it, and it can go on living,
    I'll do it. I won't needlessly shoot something for nothing," he said.

    Often, he outlines the choices to his clients.

    "They look at me and say, 'What do you think we should do?' I say:
    'If I walk up and shoot it, it's going to cost this much. A live trap
    costs this much. A kill trap costs this much.' "

    And how many clients take the cheapest option? "About 50-50," he said
    with a shrug. Governments are often most averse to culling pests.

    "Even the military seems to have a conscience these days."

    Frankian, like the birds he chases, also has flitted about. An Armenian
    born in Lebanon, he immigrated to Canada when he was a youth, served
    in the Canadian military and then turned a hobby of falconry into a
    business with four offices and 18 employees.

    He has obtained an unusual array of permits, including a fur trapper's
    license, and specialties that include mountaineering on city buildings
    and using hazardous-material equipment to remove bird droppings.

    His clients are governments that want to clean up their municipalities,
    airports that want to reduce landing hazards, companies that are
    finding fowl on their property too foul and residents plagued by
    wild visitors.

    He has worked in mines (pigeons in the shafts), oil rigs (gulls)
    and refineries (birds and animals). He's chased skunks out of mills
    and worked as far afield as Thailand and Ecuador, he said.

    This day, he decided Cody and Digger would do the work.

    "The dogs are really effective," he said. He typically brings them
    every day for a couple of weeks to clear a municipal park or a business
    site. This client is a food processing plant that does not want bird
    droppings on its grounds. Eventually, the "birds decide it's not a
    good place to be. They move on, and we don't have to kill any."

    If that doesn't work, his birds of prey do. Frankian sounds like a
    proud parent as he describes the diving attack of a hawk.

    "You just hear a big thud and see a puff of feathers," he said. "All
    the other birds see that, and they start flying like crazy out
    of there."

    As Frankian's blue pickup truck approached the Canada geese, the birds
    looked up, straightening necks. The moment was still. And then Cory
    and Digger bounded out of the truck, spaniel ears flapping, throats
    in full bark.

    With surprising speed, the geese leapt into the air, abandoning the
    slow takeoff of their usual leisurely flight. They rose and receded
    into the distance with honking complaint.

    They might be back, Frankian admitted. But so will he.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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