Letter: Humans caused geese “problem”

The following is my Letter to the Editor, printed recently in a Seattle area paper…

Dear Editor,

Whenever I read an article like “Canadian geese euthanized at Lake Sammamish State Park” (Aug.7, 2013) I’m appalled by how indifferently someone can report on the extermination of entire families of intelligent, social animals. If people knew geese as personally as I do, they would surely think the species every bit as worthy of respect as our own.

I’ve watched them go through their courtship and nest-building routines, seen a gander loyally guarding his mate while she dutifully incubated her eggs, day and night, throughout windstorms and heavy snowfalls during the fickle Montana spring and witnessed with delight the hatching and rearing of their precious chicks.

The goose situation is all the more maddening since, as with so many other so-called wildlife “problems,” it was brought on by humans themselves. The old growth forests that once grew to the water’s edge were felled years ago; shrubs like salmonberry or huckleberry as well as riparian vegetation that used to house frogs and provided cover for fish have been torn out and replaced with concrete bulkheads, backfill and manicured lawn grass.

The end result of this rampant manipulation is a strange new world, inhospitable for all but the most grass-loving of creatures. And it just so happens that geese, like humans, love mowed lawns. But rather than calling in the death-squad from “Wildlife Services” to fire up their gas chambers, why not try replacing some of the acres of grass with native vegetation? I guarantee the geese will move on to greener pastures.

Jim Robertson

Text and Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013

Text and Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013

21 thoughts on “Letter: Humans caused geese “problem”

  1. I used to work at a nursery that had a large pond and a pair of resident geese. Each year when the goslings hatched, it was wonderful watching them grow and watching the parents tending to them. There was always one gosling that would misbehave and that one was promptly, gently reprimanded, unlike human children nowadays. As the goslings grew, the parents had a daily routine. I loved when they got to flying lessons, although it was also sad, knowing the goslings would be leaving soon, however, their parents had worked hard to ensure the goslings would be able to leave the nest, which is how good parents raise their children. Geese are not the pests, humans are, because of the callous way they treat nature.

  2. Thank you Jim, for being the voice for wildlife they are blessed to have your caring and talent. I do hope the Editor of the Issaquah has the integrity to print your letter.

  3. Wonderful letter, Jim. I watch the geese flying over my place in formation every day, honking away the whole time, and it fills me with joy. People’s indifference towards other species is frightening.

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