Forced Eviction for Squatters!
Pale Male, the famous red-tailed hawk who nested on a building on Fifth Avenue overlooking Central Park, is being kicked out. The building’s residents (some of them, anyway) objected to the pigeon carcasses and hawk poop, so Pale Male’s nest has been removed:
Posted: December 8th, 2004 | Filed under: Celebrity, ManhattanA nest constructed a decade ago by red-tailed hawks 12 stories above Central Park, creating an unlikely wildlife habitat that has delighted bird lovers from around the world, was removed yesterday, apparently by workers for its host co-op apartment building.
City officials and naturalists reacted with anger, even though there appeared to be little legal recourse for the nest’s destruction.
Experts said that the fate of a family of uncommonly large and resilient birds, which have reproduced prolifically from the nest, had been thrown into doubt. So was that of the nest’s most famous red-tailed resident, Pale Male, who arrived at the building in 1993 and, according to detailed records kept by several bird-watchers, has sired 23 youngsters.
“I am so outraged that they would do this without so much as a by your leave,” said Mary Tyler Moore, who has lived for 15 years in the co-op at 927 Fifth Avenue, at 74th Street, where the nest was built in 1993 above a cornice in clear view of Central Park.
“These birds just kept coming back to the edge of the building, and people kept coming back to see them,” said Ms. Moore, who recalled at first craning her neck outside one of her windows to look up at the bottom of the nest. In more recent years, she said, she has strolled frequently across Fifth Avenue to Central Park for a better view.
“This was something we like to talk about: a kinder, gentler world, and now it’s gone,” Ms. Moore said last night.
Exactly why the nest was destroyed was unclear. A man who answered a call to 927 Fifth Avenue’s management office last night said no one was available for comment.
But Ms. Moore said other residents of the building had objected to large bird droppings and, occasionally, the carcasses of pigeons – which hawks prey upon – that landed on the sidewalk in front of their lobby. She said her husband had attended a recent co-op board meeting, and had been informed of its all-but-unanimous decision to remove the nest, even though he had objected to the move.