ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: SUNDAY, February 20, 1994                   TAG: 9402200105
SECTION: VIRGINIA                    PAGE: D-4   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: The Washington Post
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Medium


WARNING: `WHATEVER YOU DO, DON'T LIE DOWN'

With a loaded shotgun sitting next to her back door, Lynn O'Hara-Yates says she's living in terror of the dozens of black vultures that gather each morning on her back fence to stretch their wings, sharpen their talons and wait for lunch.

Recently, "lunch" has meant assorted pets in her Stafford County neighborhood.

When O'Hara-Yates tried to rescue one of her ducks last month, a vulture swooped down, whooshing within three feet of her head. The birds attacked again this week as she filmed them circling over children getting off a school bus.

"It's like something out of [Alfred Hitchcock's] `The Birds,' " the 42-year-old flight attendant said. "They're scary as hell."

Residents of the Kings Grant development have counted about 200 vultures roosting in their neighborhood.

When the first birds showed up in November, they were a curiosity. As their numbers multiplied, curiosity turned into concern despite assurances from state wildlife specialists and longtime residents that the huge birds wouldn't harm a living thing.

In the last month, O'Hara-Yates has lost eight ducks from her pond, all of them picked clean to the bone. Her neighbor's cat, Stripe, was grabbed by the tail and carried 25 feet in the air for a distance of 100 yards. A vet stitched up the four talon holes in Stripe's body. Dogs and horses also have been attacked.

Vultures are federally protected animals and cannot be killed without a permit.

Most of those spotted in Kings Grant are black vultures, which weigh about five pounds and have a wingspan of five or six feet. Black vultures are more aggressive than their cousin, the red-headed turkey vulture, and are common to the South, according to Paul Engman, a naturalist who works for the Fairfax County Park Authority.

The birds, commonly called buzzards, prefer their food either dead or dying, Engman said, but on rare occasions have been known to swoop down on live animals.

Bob Thomas, an inspector with the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, has seen horses, lambs, pigs and newborn calves attacked. Incidents have been reported in four other Virginia counties.

Thomas, who is working to rid the Kings Grant area of its vultures, said he understands residents' concerns. "I would not be comfortable with a 2-year-old child playing around them," he said. "When they're hungry, meat's meat."

O'Hara-Yates said a game warden advised her that she would be safe while feeding the animals on her 14-acre property but, he warned, "whatever you do, don't lie down."

Residents say they've been told that the harsh winter has exacerbated the problem, reducing the amount of "road kill" on which the birds normally might dine. One neighbor reported counting 52 vultures lined up on her fence one morning.

After Thomas, who has a permit, shot and killed one buzzard, O'Hara-Yates hung it in her yard to scare off the others. It worked, she said, for about two hours. Then they were back, preying on the ducks.

Now she is applying for her own license to kill. But even if she doesn't get it, she's ready. "What else can I do?" she said. "One of us is going to give up, and it's not going to be me. We'll do what we have to do."



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