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DUMPS' GULLS FACE FALCON AND THE SHOWMAN.


Byline: Dana Bartholomew Staff Writer

SUN VALLEY - A feathery feath·er·y  
adj.
1. Covered with or consisting of feathers.

2. Resembling or suggestive of a feather, as in form or lightness.



feath
 meteor flashed over the Bradley Landfill, blowing away the half-dozen sea gulls scavenging scavenging

of anesthetic. See anesthetic scavenging.
 over the fresh mountain of garbage.

For decades, the sea gull had ruled the roost at the Sun Valley dump - the bane of bulldozer operators and neighbors susceptible to their rain of rotting leftovers.

Nothing would dislodge them - until Joe Suffredini unleashed his fleeting falcons.

``Amazing,'' marveled Doug Corcoran, head of Waste Management's landfill operations throughout the Los Angeles region, as sea gulls disappeared at the sight of the brown and ivory raptors.

``Used to be we had to chase 'em off the trash. Now, when they see this guy, they just leave the entire site - just gone.''

Each week, Suffredini employs falcons at the Bradley and Simi Valley landfills to ward off flocks of ``nuisance birds.''

He dons his leather gauntlet. Doffs the hood of one of six highly trained falcons. Unleashes its talons. And with a blast of his whistle, sends the bird boomeranging A boomerang is a throwing implement that can be thrown at a target and whose aerodynamics cause it to follow a curved path that eventually brings it back to its user.

In theoretical physics, the Boomeranger
 over newly dumped lawn clippings and discarded deck chairs.

``It's just a scarecrow Scarecrow

goes to Wizard of Oz to get brains. [Am. Lit.: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz]

See : Ignorance


Scarecrow

can’t live up to his name. [Am. Lit.: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz; Am.
. We're here to intimidate 'em,'' said Suffredini, owner of Avian Entertainment, which has provided trained animals for such Hollywood productions as ``Pirates of the Caribbean This article is about the franchise. For other, more specific uses, see Pirates of the Caribbean (disambiguation). For real pirates, see Piracy in the Caribbean.
Pirates of the Caribbean
: The Curse of the Black Pearl'' and ``The X Files.''

``The falcon is the shark of the sky. They chase anything away - sea gulls, pigeons, starlings, crows. Only ravens will gang up on them, if I let them.''

While the mighty raptors have long been used to deter birds at airports, falcons are increasingly being employed at vineyards, farms and now landfills.

For the 32-year-old master falconer, chasing gulls was a lark.

For years, dumps across the nation had struggled to ward off pesky birds. They tried ``bird bombs,'' or gun blanks. They tried whistles and sea gull distress sounds. They even tried kites and balloons fashioned to look like predators.

All worked, for a time. But nothing could banish gulls or ravens, drawn to refuse since the first human trash heap.

One day between films, Suffredini dropped a load at the Chiquita Canyon Landfill.

``I saw they had a sea gull problem, thousands of sea gulls ignoring the whistles,'' said Suffredini, of Castaic. ``If a landfill has a sea gull problem,'' he thought, ``falcons are the answer.''

So the former trainer at Universal Studios animal shows drew up some brochures and sent them to local landfill companies. The Simi Valley Landfill called him the next day.

Five years later, Waste Management officials deem their falcon program an unqualified success. Now other dumps are beginning to follow suit.

``The demonstrations I've seen work pretty well,' said Mark de Bie Mark De Bie (born 5 February 1939, Aalst, Belgium) is a retired Belgian television writer.

He has written Belgian TV series such as Alfa Papa Tango in 1990 which he co-wrote with Guy Bernaert.
, manager of permits and inspections for the California Waste Management Board, who said there may be five landfills in the state using falcons. ``A few sea gulls may be a problem, but a large number can interfere with operations.''

``Offhand off·hand  
adv.
Without preparation or forethought; extemporaneously.

adj. also off·hand·ed
Performed or expressed without preparation or forethought. See Synonyms at extemporaneous.
, I don't know Don't know (DK, DKed)

"Don't know the trade." A Street expression used whenever one party lacks knowledge of a trade or receives conflicting instructions from the other party.
 of any other dumps that use falconers,'' said Darryl Perkins, president of the North American North American

named after North America.


North American blastomycosis
see North American blastomycosis.

North American cattle tick
see boophilusannulatus.
 Falconer's Association. ``It's an environmentally safe, ethical means of pest control.''

A master falconer and graduate of the Exotic Animal Training and Management program at Moorpark College, Suffredini founded Avian Entertainment to stage educational shows and supply trained birds for film and TV productions.

Now alternating days between the Simi and Bradley landfills, the lithe trainer with the wraparound Wraparound

A financing device that permits an existing loan to be refinanced and new money to be advanced at an interest rate between the rate charged on the old loan and the current market interest rate.
 shades has banished birds largely without harming wildlife. In five years, he said his falcons have managed to kill only three lame birds.

``We just intimidate 'em. Very rarely do they catch 'em.''

Suffredini now employs falcons to chase away sea gulls who had pestered outdoor diners at the Bacara Resort in Santa Barbara.

It's nature used to control nature, he said of his captive-bred Lanner lan·ner  
n.
1. A falcon (Falco biarmicus) of Africa, the Mediterranean, and southern Asia.

2. A female of this species, used in falconry.
 and Saker falcons, which originated in Africa and the Middle East. Federal conservation laws ban the use of domestic raptors.

``I think all birds are fascinating, but the falcon is what really gets me. I love all birds, even sea gulls, but I really root for the falcon.''

Dana Bartholomew, (818) 713-3730

CAPTION(S):

3 photos

Photo:

(1 -- color) Joe Suffredini releases falcon Squeaker at Bradley Landfill to chase away sea gulls and other pesky birds that frequent the site looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 snacks.

(2 -- 3 -- color) Master falconer Joe Suffredini, who provides animals for Hollywood productions, works with Squeaker at the landfill.

Hans Gutknecht/Staff Photographer
COPYRIGHT 2005 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jul 25, 2005
Words:734
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