Cut with red beak.
A seasonal bird’s weathering season has signed up for car diseases in a city of Massachusetts, leaving residents protecting their vehicles from the acute peak of the feathered threat, according to the reports.
The annoying mystery of two months, at least 25, the shattered and shattered mirrors and windshields on the windshield in Rockport were recently broken when a place caught the pile carpenter bird on the spot.
“The carpenter bird appeared and landed on the windshield of the RV in our patio and was looking at its reflection,” said 59 -year -old Janelle Favaloro, to Today.
“And we think:” You know what, I bet that he was also the one who damaged the mirrors. “
Favaloro, one of the unsuspecting victims of the Angry Bird, shared the discovery on the Facebook page of his neighborhood, describing the “vandal” as “from 18 to 24 inches tall, with black and white with a red hat.”
The locals quickly revealed a burst or similar damage on the road of the carpenter bird.
Mike Foster said the avian left a “good big crack” in his Ford F-350 truck.
“When he landed in the window, I thought he was my girlfriend hitting the window,” he left the New York Times.
“I thought,” Oh, I’m in trouble. “I was looking directly into my eyes for 30 second seconds.
Experts suggested that the destructive behavior of the black and white carpenter bird is linked to the territorial male bird of the size of a crow, its reflex is reflected in the car that is reflected as a rival while flowing during the mating season.
A specialist told The Outlet that the carpenter’s bird strike is the “biomechanical equivalent of a hammer.”
“This time of the year is the mating season, so all birds, not only piled carpenters, but all birds are getting into a very aggressive territorial courtship exhibition,” said a spokesman for Zoo Miami to Today.
“If they are the reflection of things, they do not understand that it is a reflection; they think it is a competitor.”
While the six guy pecker continues to fly to the feathers, the residents with damaged cars told Goucester Daily Times that they paid for their repairs from their pocket, but they did not notice much that the damage delayed them.
Meanwhile, the locals are presenting intelligent ways to protect their cars.
“Many people simply pull their mirrors, bending them; several people have put small garbage bags on the subject, such as groceries,” Favaloro told People.
“My next neighbor put some scarves there just to cover the glass. You simply do what you have to do.”