Below is a video produced from Wildlife Services of the USDA:
 The video demonstrates egg addling techniques that are used to manage  "overabundant" Canada goose populations. 
 But, they never say what is considered to be "overabundant." 
 According to people met the other day, six geese at Turtle Pond in Central  Park were "too many."
 Central Park has long addled goose eggs.  The only reason why six  goslings hatched last year at Turtle Pond was apparently because the parent  geese adapted to the addling and built their nest somewhere in the rocks near  Belvedere Castle -- an area dangerous and difficult for park workers to get to.  
 In fact, in all of Central Park last year, only two pairs of geese  succeeded in producing young. 
 The result of all the harassing and egg destruction, is that for people  like me, who actually enjoy seeing geese, we usually have to walk  a long way from our homes to actually see these birds.  And even that is  only certain times of the year. 
 I don't in fact, live near Harlem Meer.  It is more than a mile from  where I live.
 The reason I go there so often is strictly to see the geese and other  waterfowl.   It is more common to see geese at Harlem Meer than almost  any other area in the park.  
 However, even at the Meer, the geese are harassed on a semi-regular basis  and so there are large blocks of time when no geese are seen there at all. --  particularly spring into the summer. 
 At the moment, geese are at Harlem Meer.
 But, they will not be allowed to stay, much less  breed there.
 Once the spring arrives and more people use the park, the geese will be  given their "flying papers" so to speak.
 Usually, the geese return back to the Meer in late August after  breeding and molting has occurred somewhere else.  
 But, they continue to be harassed until the winter finally  arrives.  By that time, many of the geese have naturally migrated  to areas in the south anyway. One has to question the wisdom  and practicality of "harassing" the geese late into the fall.
  Indeed, the only thing the goose harassment of last November at  Harlem Meer accomplished was scaring off permanently, the lone swan who had  been living there since early October -- along with the Northern Shovelers.   
 It would be wrong to specifically "blame" Central Park for all the  harassment and egg destruction.  Central Park Conservancy has to respond to  both, complaints by geese-hating people like those encountered the  other day ("The geese should be cooked!").  And they have to respond to the  demands of the city and the federal government. 
 And so, we come down to the inevitable choice:  Either harass the  geese, chase them away and destroy their eggs -- or, round up and gas them.  
 A "choice" that reminds one somewhat of the movie, "Sophie's Choice."
 It seems we as humans have a long history of demonizing,  persecuting  and targeting certain species of animals for endless harassment  and destruction.
 Who can, after all,  forget the "big, bad wolves" of  childhood fairy tales?  
 But, it wasn't just fairy tales that spelled eventual near extinction  of wolves.  Practices like hunting, shootings from the air, denning,  poisoning and trapping brought the species to its literal knees. 
 Then there are the "evil coyotes." (A natural predator, by the way, of  geese.)  Similar destruction campaigns have been waged on coyotes  for centuries as with the wolves and geese.   But, like the  geese, the coyotes are extremely "wily" and so far, have adapted to most of  man's attempts to utterly destroy them.
 There are in fact, many species of "pest" animals that humans endlessly  target for destruction from starlings to pigs to crows to peaceful pigeons  and doves.  Even the beautiful mute swans are not free from human  wrath.  They are, in fact, high on the government "hit list" of  animals to be "reduced."
 One wonders what drives us as humans to so despise certain species of  animals and seemingly want them banished from the planet?
 Is it fear and paranoia?  ("Get them before they get us?")  But,  how does that apply to peaceful animals like doves, swans and geese who  represent no real "threat" to us?  
 Is it jealousy?  ("The birds can naturally fly, but we  can't.")  So, we build big steel machines that can knock birds out of the  skies -- or we kill the birds to make room for the big steel machines. 
 Or, is it simply misdirected aggression?  We are frustrated or  unfulfilled by something in our lives and seek some "target" to direct our  anger, negativity and hostilities towards?
 I don't know what the underlying reasons are.  I just know they make  no sense. 
 Nor, does it make sense that first we target and kill the  "evil" predators, (such as coyotes) and then target and kill the "pest"   prey because we then claim there are "too many" (such as the  hapless geese.)
 The more we "manage and control," the more we have to. 
 And yes, we always seem to need some animal target to focus our paranoia,  neurosis and frustrations upon.
 And right now, that unfortunate animal species is most of all, the regal  and peaceful, Canada goose.  
 Perhaps the real "overabundance" is our own neurosis. -- PCA
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