The goose killings may be over in New York City for this year, however,  they continue elsewhere.  This article and video (from this past  Tuesday) is from Durham, North Carolina:
It is important to watch the news clip video provided in this  story, because it provides information that the geese were  first drugged with "sedatives" and then later gassed.
Moreover, various comments and posts on the WRAL Facebook page claim  that most of the geese rounded up were "goslings" and temperatures in  Durham over the past couple of days have exceeded 100 degrees.    (So much for the USDA claim that they "don't round up geese in the heat because  it stresses out the birds too much."  If 100 degrees isn't too hot to do  goose roundups, what is?)
To add insult (and irony) to injury, one needs to consider that most  of the 21 gassed geese and goslings in Durham would have left  anyway in just a couple of weeks to return to their staging location  (more about that later).
There were more than 130 comments to the original news video on the  WRAL Facebook page.  
Once again, another community divided against itself in its passions to  either kill or save the geese.  
This issue, when exposed and covered by the media is almost as  divisive among people as abortion and gay rights.
That is especially noteworthy, because the media to this point, has mostly  acted as a mouthpiece for the USDA (rather than the "watchdog" to the  government actions it is supposedly covering). Most news  reports so far have been biased in favor of killing the  geese. 
This particular "news" story was a typical  governmental mouthpiece in that the reporter used the now familiar  euphemisms employed by the USDA such as "removals" and "euthanasia" of the  geese and particularly emphasized the "nuisance" of goose poop. (It would  really be nice if just one of these days a reporter actually looked up the word,  "euthanasia" in a dictionary before using it to describe goose roundups  and gassings or sending the geese to slaughter.)
Ah, for the sake of a little goose poop, many thousands of geese and  their babies should die!
(On a side note, it is funny how most of the people whining about "goose  poop" never consider the "poop" produced by the six million "food" animals  that we raise and slaughter every day in this country.   Droppings that contribute to global warming, water pollution and land  erosion.  But, that is OK because we are "loving" our McDonald's  hamburgers!)
Like the "20,000 geese" claimed by the USDA to exist in the NYC  metropolitan area for the past two to three years, the "3.5 million"  figure quoted nationwide, has also been bandied around for at least the last two  years.
That is to assume that the accelerated and nationwide hunting and  cullings of geese has had absolutely NO effect upon their  population!
That seems like a tall assumption.
If all these shootings, gassings and sending to slaughter hundreds of  thousands of geese over the past few years have had absolutely no effect  upon the population, why exactly are we doing them?
Are we, in all our blood lust on the geese, creating a kind of  "superbird" that is able to compensate and reproduce faster than  we can kill them?
That would be the only possible explanation for a murderous campaign that  despite its zeal and fanaticism fails to make any dent in the  goose population for at least two years! 
But, despite the adaptability of the wily geese, I personally doubt we  have created a "superbird" that is able to withstand and survive everything we  throw at them, from harassment to egg destruction to guns to slaughterhouses to  gas chambers.
Even if the population of Canada geese is still 3.5 million despite the  hundreds of thousands of killings over the past few years, that does not seem  overwhelming for a country the size of the United States. 
As one might guess from reading this and other entries on this site, I am  somewhat dubious about the USDA claims of the "overpopulation of geese" in both  the country and New York City (although to some people, even a population of TWO  geese constitutes  "overpopulation.")
I of course, can point to no actual "evidence" of goose numbers, except the  ones I count in Central Park. 
But, even those are hard to "count" because they fluctuate throughout the  year and according to the precise time of year.
During this past molting season there has been a total of around 40  geese in all of Central Park.
But, that number should rise over the next few weeks as Harlem Meer is a  typical "staging  site" for the geese.
(A staging (or "gathering") site is a location where the  geese typically meet up with former members of flock or family just  prior to fall migrations.)
Usually during the last weeks in July and early weeks of August, new  gaggles of geese arrive at Harlem Meer several weeks before the fall  migrations.  There, they apparently meet up and gather with  former flock and family members.  They may stay a few weeks or even a  couple of months until either "harassed" or leaving on their own to fly  in large groups  to wintering locations.
Usually the number of geese at Harlem Meer during the "staging season"  balloons up to about 100 geese.
So far, there are still just the 8 molting (and very  shy) geese at Harlem Meer.
But, if that number doesn't change soon, we will know that all the killings  of geese around the city have indeed had "impact."   (That  "20,000" quote would thus be just a bunch of hooey, based on  goose figures from 3, 4 or even 5 years ago.)
But, so much depends on the numbers of geese we see now  and over the next few weeks -- especially in those sites  known as staging locations.  We need to compare the  numbers observed this year with those known from the recent past. 
In essence, though not necessary to worry now that the geese still in  our city parks are subject to possible round-ups, it is every bit as  important to monitor and count their numbers.
Perhaps even more so, than during the actual molting and raising  young, period.
We need to learn and know whether the geese in our city are in  danger of actual eradication or whether, in all our lust to kill, we have  created a kind of 'superbird" able to withstand and survive anything.
Personally, I will be looking very closely at Harlem Meer over the next  month or so. 
That will provide the real clues and answers about actual goose population  trends in New York City, rather than USDA seemingly  outdated quotes.
I urge others to do the same, especially if living near a known staging  area for the geese. 
How does one know if one is living in a staging location for geese?
If many new geese begin to arrive from now until September. 
Please count numbers and log in a journal. Compare with numbers from  last year (if available) and to next year (presuming we still have geese next  year).  Please share on goose Facebook pages: 
The importance of keeping and sharing counts of geese in staging  locations cannot be emphasized enough. They ideally should be  significantly larger than goose counts other times of the year.   
Without accurate counts,  it is impossible to know what "effect" all  the harassments, egg addling and goose killings have actually  had.   
We will simply be forced to rely on government quotes and that does not  seem to bode well for the ultimate welfare, stability and survivability of  the geese. -- PCA
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