Wildlife sightings along these trails increase dramatically in spring—deer with new fawns, turkey families parading in single file ... create those magical moments of connection with wild ...
Brookline Police is putting out a warning for residents that wild turkeys may be aggressive as it's their mating season.
“The Case of the Missing Turkeys” continues on from last week. I began to see the birds walking on the streets of Wheaton in small groups. I had never seen wild ... I carried photos I had ...
An aggressive wild turkey chased a parking enforcement officer in Brookline into a building on Wednesday, and police warned residents to be on the lookout as the turkey mating season gets underway.
Anyone who encounters an unusually aggressive turkey is asked to report it to the Brookline Police Department’s Animal Control unit at 617-730-2222, and to include the location, time, and description ...
But turkeys have to eat, too, and paying attention to what wild turkeys eat can pay off. Understanding what wild turkeys eat—and why they eat certain foods at certain times of the year—is valuable ...
Wild turkeys can be unruly neighbors. They poop all over the place, damage trees with their sharp claws, hold up traffic and are known to bully dogs, children and the occasional mail carrier.
In a Popular Science magazine article in 2017, the PGC turkey biologist admitted that the agency had no idea that the eastern wild turkey population was dramatically decreasing in Penn’s Woods.