The other day I angered a fellow advocate on Facebook when,  referring to the low numbers of geese around the city and noting the plans for  NYC geese next year, I wrote, "Take your photos now and kiss the geese  goodbye."                                      
Does such sound melodramatic or over the top?
Undoubtedly to those who still have some geese in their parks, it  does.
But, personally, I haven't seen one goose in Central Park since last  Thursday and I have been to all the main watercourses.
Moreover, while we are not getting goose number reports from all over the  city, the ones we are getting appear, like Central  Park, ominous.
Currently, the number of geese at Prospect Park in Brooklyn is between 40  and 50.  That may sound like a robust number -- until we compare it to the  number of geese at Prospect Park during this same time period last  year.
Prospect Park was of course, the site last summer, where 368 geese and  goslings were rounded up on a July 8th morning and sent for gassing at  JFK airport. 
The entire goose population was wiped out.
But, less than two months later, 107 new geese had flown into the Prospect  Park:
Contrast that to this year:
Throughout the molting period at Prospect Park at least 35 geese were  observed. 
That number now is about the same -- less than half of what it  was the same time last year, even after the entire goose population had  been eradicated six weeks earlier.
It essentially means that either very few or even no new  geese have flown into Prospect Park since the molting period  ended, several weeks ago.  (Last year, 107 had flown in.)
That is the same phenomenon observed in Central Park.  No  new geese flying in during a period when, in the past, many dozens would arrive  to Harlem Meer following molting and raising of young.
At Inwood Park in Manhattan, a goose roundup occurred this summer, but the  USDA apparently did not get all the geese.
There are still a couple of dozen geese around the Inwood Park  area, but few, if any new geese flying in.
While these numbers might not seem "alarming" to some, the fact we are not  seeing new goose arrivals at a time we normally do, is, to my mind,  very concerning.
Especially when one considers the plans currently in the works for NYC  geese next year. (Send to local slaughterhouses and distribute to "soup  kitchens.")
Additionally, with an early and expanded hunting season on the geese in New  York State, we can anticipate about 70,000 of them to be shot either with guns  or bows and arrows starting as early as the first weeks in September.
Add all of these facts up and yes, it looks very bad for any  "resident" geese in New York City right now and indeed, throughout the entire  state.
I believe there is tendency among some people (especially  those in areas where there are still some geese) to "look on the positive  side" and presume those geese will still be around next year.
I believe no such assumptions can be made in any area,  especially when looking at prevailing  tendencies, harassments, plans and downturns.
If we become complacent and do nothing over the next ten months then next  summer we will once again be in the position of "reaction" and "shock" to goose  roundups that have already occurred.
Personally, I am tired of always being in that position.  
I am not interested in attending rallies and protests every year for geese  already slaughtered.   Bloomberg is laughing at us behind the  posh draperies of his Manhattan townhouse.
The time to observe, question, petition, lobby and protest  is now, not June of next year.
It will be too little, too late then -- as it has been for the last 8  years.
The wheels are already in motion to turn the remaining NYC geese next  year into "gooseburgers."
We cannot wait around to cry crocodile tears then.
I am glad that over the past few years, I took hundreds of photos and  some videos of Central Park geese.
Right now, that is all that I have.
And yes, to the others around New York City who still have some geese in  their local parks and think those animals are "safe,"  I say,  "Take your photos now and kiss the geese goodbye."   --  PCA
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