Instead of listening to the weather experts and   entirely shutting down New York City, Mayor deBlasio would have done   better to pay attention to the geese. 
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When going to Central Park on Monday during the midst of   fast falling snow, I was convinced there would be no geese and   ducks at the Reservoir.  After all, the mayor had warned about an "epic and   historical blizzard," the likes of which New Yorkers "had never seen   before."
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Pretty heady stuff for sure. 
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Of course deBlasio had also warned New Yorkers to stay out of   city parks during the storm, but neither I nor many other people paid attention   to that.  As long as the parks were open, many of us were   going.
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But, what about the geese and ducks?  Usually, before any   major weather event, the birds pack up their wings and leave. 
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Imagine my shock when discovering most of the geese and ducks   were still at the Reservoir!  
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While it was clear some of the birds had indeed departed,   it appeared the decision of the majority was to stay and tough out the storm.   
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A thought then ran through the back of my mind. 
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Maybe the storm isn't going to be as bad as   predicted?
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Since I had never known the geese and ducks to stay just prior   to any significant storm, the thought didn't seem so far fetched.   -- Rather, it gave comfort. 
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Moreover, the falling snow and then blanketed park seemed to   buffer and subdue the normally biting sting of the cold. The air felt   strangely calm and almost warm and inviting. It was perhaps the most comfortable   I had felt in the park in weeks.
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As matters turned out, it was the geese and ducks who were   right and the National Weather Service -- and the mayor wrong. 
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New York City received only 9.8 inches of snow -- far less   than the 24 to 30 inches predicted. 
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Yesterday, when giving another press conference, deBlasio   appeared somewhat irritated -- as if embarrassed that the plain, old   ordinary snow storm didn't turn out to be the cataclysmic catastrophe he had   predicted. When asked by a reporter, if New York City was "going soft," the   testy mayor responded, "As a child, I did walk barefoot through the snow,   so I share some of that concern. I think it's not softness to respond to extreme   weather." 
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Aside from learning that deBlasio's mother apparently didn't   buy him shoes or boots, the mayor's definition of "extreme weather" seems in   itself, extreme. 
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Just ask the geese and ducks who, surely sensing what was   about to come, elected to stoically stay and wait it   out. 
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Yesterday, when returning to Central Park following the "epic   and historical" event, the geese and ducks had simply returned to their familiar   behaviors when facing challenging weather and fast freezing watercourses.   
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They have evidently chosen a particular open water   spot near the North Gate House to stake out their claim. Alternating   and cooperating with each other, the birds are working somewhat   tirelessly at swimming in the small, open pool to maintain and keep it   moving. 
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That task will presumably become much harder   over the coming days as temperatures are predicted by weather   forecasters to dive even further to single digits next week. 
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But, for now, the geese, mallards and few coots have made   calculated decision to stay and tough it out.
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Should I note the resilient water birds suddenly   giving up the cause and leaving, I will know then that the weather is   seriously about to go to hell.
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Truth is, "We don't need a weatherman to know which way the   wind blows" (to quote Dylan). 
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We just need to observe the behavior of the geese -- and their   working pals, the mallards. -- PCA
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1 comment:
Great account of NYC CP snow storm situation! - (')>
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