All we could do was run’: the strange story of Gerald, the turkey who terrorized a city

The Guardian
by Kari Paul –

The turkey locked eyes with her from across the park.

Like many Oaklanders, sixteen-year-old Jojo Thompson had heard plenty of stories about Gerald, the “feisty” turkey harassing visitors in the city’s rose garden. But before visiting the seven-acre public park with a friend on a recent October afternoon, she thought the tales had been exaggerated.

After seeing the agitated turkey closing in on some people nearby, Thompson and her friend took refuge behind a tree. But they weren’t safe for long – Gerald soon had the teens in his sight. The bird started stalking them, menacingly, Thompson recalled, then chased them up the hill and out of the park. She lost both her shoes in the process.

“I had heard of his attacks, but I never thought it would happen to me,” Thompson said. “All we could do was run.”

Gerald’s unusually aggressive behavior in the rose garden has taken on an almost mythical status in parts of the California city over the past six months. Stories of his reign of terror in the otherwise tranquil spot first spread across town, then sparked national and international headlines.

The reports were often similar: Gerald would spot an unsuspecting victim from across the garden. He would take off running, either chasing them away or, if they stood their ground, mounting and scratching them until they fled. He often targeted the young and older people – those who could not quickly outrun him. He seemed particularly attracted to wheeled vehicles including, unfortunately, baby strollers.

When angry, he puffed up his chest, towering over 4ft tall. And despite his bulk, he was swift – a typical adult male turkey can weigh up to 25lbs, run at 25mph, and fly at up to 55mph. Wild turkeys have a 270-degree field of vision and can see three times more clearly than 20/20 – making it easy for Gerald to spot his victims from across the garden.

Gerald’s antics transfixed the city, with residents hunkered down at home because of the pandemic and wildfire smoke following the saga on social media, blogs and news reports. A fierce debate emerged: what should be done? Ban visitors from the park? Move Gerald to less frequented areas? Should he, perhaps, be euthanized?

The discussions played out in thousands of online threads that at times turned neighbor against neighbor. At least three city agencies and the state department of fish and wildlife became involved, an expert animal trapper was called in, and an electrical company entered the fray.


Once we locked eyes he sprinted towards me, wings outstretched. I just barely made it to my car
Julia Williams

On the surface, it was the story of a ticked-off turkey menacing an otherwise bucolic neighborhood. But beneath, the battle over Gerald’s fate revealed far more about his human neighbors, their response to a historic pandemic, and whether they can coexist with nature – or with each other.

‘A winged boogie man, a Cerberus of the rose garden’
It is unclear how long Gerald had roamed the rose garden, or when he was given his name. Some say they saw the bird fly into the garden about four years ago. Many started recognizing Gerald because of his fanned tail, missing a prominent feather on the left side.

What is evident, however, is that Gerald began to turn on his human neighbors this year.

According to a Guardian tally of online reports, Gerald harassed more than 100 people in 2020.

Attacks from the turkey became so common that some people would not enter the rose garden without a weapon: a stick, a rake, or an umbrella were widely suggested. One person said he used pepper spray. Some people stopped going to the park altogether.

Even those who stayed out weren’t safe. Julia Williams, who lives nearby, describes a typical encounter with the bird. “I was carrying a basket of laundry to my car when we saw each other,” she recalled.

“Once we locked eyes he sprinted towards me, wings outstretched. I just barely made it to my car but completely threw my back out in the process. I was in bed unable to walk for over a week.”

In online accounts, some victims described simply being chased, while others suffered lacerations from his claws and bruises. At least one person claimed to have been sent to the hospital for stitches. Not all accounts of run-ins with Gerald could be verified, but interviews with victims and review of photos and videos of attacks confirmed many.

“He had this habit of loitering by the stairs of the garden, almost daring you to walk up or down,” said Maria Hunt, who has lived near the garden for more than a decade and was attacked by Gerald two separate times in 2020. “Gerald was like a winged boogie man, a Cerberus of the rose garden who would have been comical if he hadn’t been so menacing.”

‘This is not normal behavior’
Gerald was once a mellow guy, often seen standing in line with people waiting at the casual carpool, a community-driven ride sharing service, or calmly stalking around the fountains of the garden.

But in late 2019 or early 2020, he started to change. “This is not normal behavior,” said Alan Krakauer, a turkey behavior expert.

Krakauer explained that male turkeys fight each other for dominance and over flocks of hens. But occasionally, some males misdirect that aggression to include people.

The big question is why Gerald’s relationship to humans soured.

Turkey populations have been on the rise in California in recent decades, after years of conservationists’ attempts to encourage populations in the wild. The bird is a common sight in Oakland – there are often two or three pecking around the garden.

Many attribute Gerald’s behavior changes to garden visitors feeding him, including one woman well-known in the neighborhood for giving him daily snacks. Indeed, Krakauer said, feeding turkeys may make them dangerously accustomed to humans and more likely to approach them. But others doubt this theory, arguing Gerald had been fed for years before his behavior took a turn.

Another common theory is that a rise in Oakland’s population, and a decline in natural spaces where turkeys can thrive, increased the potential for turkey-human conflict.

“Gerald was not an issue until Covid hit,” said Susan Jones, who has lived next to the garden for more than a decade and has been familiar with Gerald for years. She added that had never seen the garden as crowded as it was in the early months of the pandemic.

Many more, including the author Jenny Odell, blame the pandemic too. Odell wrote much of her well-known talk about how we engage with the natural world, How to Do Nothing, while sitting in the Rose Garden. She often observed Gerald, then a perfectly mild-mannered turkey, meandering around.

But with few outdoor oases in walking distance and gyms shutting down, the rose garden got more visitors. Residents of the surrounding neighborhoods came to the garden more frequently. Gerald became increasingly agitated.

Odell recalls how Bay Area parks became flooded with visitors after the Covid lockdowns pushed stir-crazy people outdoors. “In the pandemic, so many of us are going for walks for peace of mind, but often instead of communion with nature we are thinking about getting what we need from it.”

‘It tore the neighborhood apart’
As damaging as Gerald’s presence was to people in the garden, perhaps even more explosive was the conversation on Nextdoor, a popular social media platform for neighbors to discuss local issues.

Nancy Friedman, a longtime resident and neighborhood “lead” on Nextdoor, said she had never seen such a divisive topic on the platform, “with people attacking each other more often than the turkey attacked people”.


Everyone was being so judgmental of each other, and of the turkey
Jojo Thompson

Rumors and accusations flew around the neighborhood, and the police were called at least once in response to a woman who fed Gerald.

“Some of the rifts this created – I don’t think they will ever be healed,” said one neighbor, who did not want to speak on the record for fear of repercussions from the community, of the arguments both on Nextdoor and offline.

Discussions quickly turned nasty. Some in the pro-Gerald camp wanted to cede the garden entirely to the bird. “Lose the garden, keep the turkeys,” one person said. Meanwhile, the anti-Gerald camp lobbied to have him euthanized or otherwise removed as soon as possible. “Relocate the turkey to the wild, or cook him for Thanksgiving,” one comment said.

“I’m an animal lover, but come on people!” wrote another. “Do you want to see this ‘lovely bird’ taking an eye out of your child?”

On 29 May, the city closed the rose garden to give Gerald some space and “train the turkey to keep distance from humans”. This further infuriated the anti-turkey camp, who argued humans should not be locked out of one of our few green spaces in Oakland during the stifling pandemic.

“Why are you so angry? Why are you attacking people?” one commenter spat at another in a typical thread. “You are rude to others and this is sad to me,” said another. “Don’t be so snappy.”

“If I see one more post about the rose garden I’m going to lose it,” yet another exasperated commenter wrote. “Shut the whole thing down: it causes more distress and upset than any single other thing on this site.”

Thompson, who posted about her Gerald encounter on Nextdoor, said she faced immediate vitriol.

“Someone told me to get psychiatric help, other people blamed me for the attack,” she said. “It just didn’t make sense – everyone was being so judgmental of each other, and of the turkey.”

The rift over Gerald split along those who believed he “belonged” in the garden and was simply defending his home, and those who believed he had no place there.

The anti-turkey camp was quick to point out that turkeys are not native to California – having been introduced as hunting targets in the early 20th century – and are seen by some as invasive. It is thought that the brood of rose garden turkeys to which Gerald belonged were forced there in 1991 following major fires that pushed them out of the nearby hills. Valerie Winemiller, who lives a few blocks from the Rose Garden, sees his aggressive behavior as a symbol of human encroachment into natural spaces.

“The fact that it has been given a human name is indicative of the problem,” she said. “I’ve witnessed a number of people getting too close to the birds while attempting selfies or even wanting to treat it like a pet – a potentially costly mistake for both parties. It is a wild animal.”

‘Save Gerald’
As attacks increased in number and severity the city of Oakland was forced to act, obtaining a permit to euthanize and remove the turkey, which is classified as a “nuisance animal”.

Gerald was scheduled to be killed on 22 June, to the horror of many on Nextdoor.

“Why is it we always feel the need to restrict the animals and not the people?” one commenter said. “It’s [the turkeys’] home and they are protecting it the same way you would with your home.”

A petition on Change.org to save Gerald quickly amassed more than 13,000 signatures. Concerned neighbors wrote emails to Oakland animal services and the city. A Virginia-based animal rights group called United Poultry Concerns joined the campaign, and an animal sanctuary offered to take Gerald in.

Meanwhile, a war was being waged via flyers posted around the rose garden. “Wanted” signs encouraging the killing of Gerald appeared. Soon after, artistic homages to Gerald reimagined the bird as an Egyptian god.

In response to the intense backlash, the city began looking for alternatives. Representatives from Oakland animal services attempted to re-train Gerald to fear humans – a regimen that involved, among other things, startling him with swiftly opened umbrellas – but to no avail.

Eventually, the decision was made to capture and relocate him to a less-populated part of the city. A spokesperson from the department of fish and wildlife said it was “exceedingly rare” for it to relocate a turkey rather than kill it but called the situation “a bit of a unique occasion” due to the volume of support for Gerald.

However, capturing the turkey proved complicated. According to reports in the Oaklandside, staff from animal services and the department of fish and wildlife used ground nets, net guns, robotic turkey calls, and an umbrella painted to resemble a male turkey, all without success. They even tried to lure Gerald with his favorite foods: blueberries and almonds. Yet by June, more than 20 volunteers had tried and failed to capture him.

Backup was called in the form of Rebecca Dmytryk, the director of Wildlife Emergency Services, a private volunteer group based in California’s central coast. Dmytryk describes herself as an expert animal trapper, but she still struggled to close in on Gerald.

She staked out the park over the course of a month before settling on a new method. She decided to act like Gerald’s favorite prey – an enfeebled old woman. She crouched over as if unable to move, luring in Gerald, before grabbing him by the neck.

“He just had this stunned look on his face, I will never forget his expression,” she said. “It was like he was saying, ‘What? Little old me?’”

‘The story is hardly over”
Gerald’s new home was a patch of wild land in the hills of Berkeley, owned by an electric company that had agreed to allow the turkey to live out his days in peace and quiet.

His retirement dreams, however, did not last long.

According to the department of fish and wildlife, Gerald found his way into the playground of a new park within a week.

“The staff called us because they recognized him from news stories,” said a spokesperson. “Our law enforcement officers went and picked him up again and took him to another location.”

Gerald’s story lives on with local residents who fondly remember his legacy as the garden’s top bird. In his absence, one person made an oil painting memorializing him. Another is writing a children’s book inspired by his plight. As for the garden, it still isn’t turkey-free.

On Nextdoor, a comment left after Gerald’s removal noted that there were several young male turkeys around. “The story is hardly over,” it concluded.

Wailea Blue Course, closed since July, to reopen Dec. 20

The Maui News
by Robert Collias –

Barry Helle has worked in a quiet office since July 6, but he will welcome the return to louder, more normal times in a few weeks.

The Wailea Golf Club announced Wednesday that the Wailea Blue Course will reopen on Dec. 20. Helle, the general manager of the Blue Course, could not be happier.

“It’s been quite a bit different, I’ve been coming to work every day,” Helle said. “It’s a lot quieter environment than I’m used to or what I like, but there has been some projects that I have been doing. The biggest one is we’re in the midst of changing our reservations and point-of-sale software to a whole new system.

“It will be up and running by the time we open the doors on the 20th.”

After emergency public health orders temporarily shuttered golf courses in the spring, the 18-hole course initially reopened in early May, but closed again on July 6 due to extremely difficult economic conditions brought about by the pandemic.

Helle has not stopped working as the protocols change often to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic. Golfers are now allowed to ride two per cart, but must wear a face mask until they reach the first tee.

“A lot of it has just been planning and gearing up to what it’s going to be like to run the golf course in this COVID era,” Helle said. “A lot of it has to do with extra cleaning of the golf cart and just addressing the overall sanitation issues.”

Flagsticks are left in the hole and players may choose to play out of a bunker or lift and place their ball out of the bunker because there are no rakes to reshape the bunkers after previous play.

“These are all protocols that have come down from the United States Golf Association and been adopted by pretty much all of the golf courses here in Hawaii,” Helle said.

The Blue maintenance staff has taken advantage of the break.

“I think the fairways and the greens are going to be pretty much the way we left it, which were in really good shape,” Helle said. “One thing that we’ve done, we’ve done some heavy maintenance on the fairways and greens, but they’ve pretty much recovered.

“We did it earlier to give it time to recover … really taking it down and letting it grow back nice and lush.”

It is not an opportunity the course was looking for, but nonetheless it was an opportunity.

“Sometimes you’ve got to take advantage of the opportunities you normally wouldn’t get,” Helle said. “But our maintenance crew and our supervisor did a great job of coming up with the plan to take advantage and do things that you normally couldn’t do if you were operating.”

Now, with Maui tourism beginning to revive, the golf club determined it was time to reopen the Blue.

“We are very excited — and deeply grateful — to be at this point,” Helle said in a news release. “We always said we were going to reopen when the economy got a little better, we just didn’t know exactly when that would be. We’re very much looking forward to welcoming back staff members and loyal customers.”

For more information about green fees, COVID-19 policies and online reservations, visit waileagolf.com or call the Blue Course pro shop at 879-2530.

Lifting crude oil export ban dealt blow to Jones Act tankers

Hellenic Shipping News

The 2015 repeal of a 40-year ban on the export of crude oil from the U.S. has left a sizable dent in the U.S. tanker industry, according to a U.S. watchdog agency.

A report released Friday by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) detailed how U.S. refineries – particularly those on the East Coast that had no access to cheaper transportation options such as pipelines – were left having to pay more to receive domestic crude oil on more expensive U.S.-flagged tankers and barges before the ban was repealed, when U.S. crude oil was selling at depressed prices relative to foreign crude.

Ships moving cargo between U.S. ports – known as Jones Act ships, named after a law requiring that such domestic cargo be carried on vessels that are not only U.S. flagged but U.S. built, U.S. owned and U.S. crewed as well – can cost almost five times as much to operate than foreign-flagged ships, due mainly to the cost of employing U.S. crews.

After the repeal of the ban, the price of domestic crude oil increased relative to the price of foreign crude oil for U.S refineries, which meant their demand for Jones Act tankers and barges decreased. U.S. crude shipped by Jones Act tankers and barges from the Gulf Coast to the East Coast fell by 57% in 2016, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. At the same time, imports of foreign crude oil to the East Coast rose by 35% in 2016, likely to replace the decline in shipments of domestic crude oil from the Gulf Coast, according to the GAO.

“Taken together, these two factors led to a decline in the demand for Jones Act tankers to transport U.S. crude oil from points within the United States in the years after the repeal of the ban,” the report noted.

Shipping companies that continue to operate Jones Act tankers to transport crude oil have been forced to significantly cut their shipping rates, according to those interviewed by GAO.

The effect of lifting the ban hit the U.S. shipbuilding sector as well, due to the Jones Act’s domestic build requirement. After the repeal, one of the two remaining U.S. shipyards capable of building Jones Act crude tankers saw a 90% drop in employment, according to one shipping industry representative.

In addition, “the boom in the construction of tankers to transport stranded domestic crude oil prior to the repeal of the export ban left shipping companies with excess shipping capacity, which has since been used to transport other products (such as refined products), salvaged for parts or idled,” according to the report.

One shipping representative interviewed said approximately 80% of the Jones Act fleet was built between 2007 and 2016. Because they have 30-year lifespans, “it is unlikely that there will be a need to build new tankers in this decade given the decrease in demand,” he said.

None of those interviewed said repealing the ban directly affected movement of refined petroleum products by Jones Act tankers and barges, according to GAO, because the repeal had limited effects on the production, export and import of domestic refined petroleum products.

“Refined products are still shipped by Jones Act tankers and barges between some points in the United States, such as refineries in Texas and Louisiana to consumers in Florida, due to a lack of pipelines connecting these states.”

USAJOBS Daily Search Results for Agriculture Jobs in Hawaii for 11/20/2020

Consumer Safety Inspector
Department: Department of Agriculture –
Agency: Food Safety and Inspection Service –
Number of Job Opportunities & Location(s): 1 vacancy – Kapolei, Hawaii
Salary: $49,390.00 to $70,918.00 / PA
Series and Grade: GS-1862-8/9
Open Period: 2020-11-20 to 2020-12-03
Position Information: Permanent – Full-Time
Who May Apply: Career transition (CTAP, ICTAP, RPL), Internal to an agency

Loan Assistant / Specialist (Agricultural)
Department: Department of Agriculture –
Agency: Farm Service Agency –
Number of Job Opportunities & Location(s): Many vacancies – Multiple Locations
Salary: $34,916.00 to $74,958.00 / PA
Series and Grade: GS-1165-5/9
Open Period: 2020-11-20 to 2021-07-15
Position Information: Permanent – Full-Time
Who May Apply: Career transition (CTAP, ICTAP, RPL), Open to the public

Program Technician
Department: Department of Agriculture –
Agency: Farm Service Agency –
Number of Job Opportunities & Location(s): Many vacancies – Multiple Locations
Salary: $34,916.00 to $61,643.00 / PA
Series and Grade: GS-1101-5/7
Open Period: 2020-11-20 to 2021-07-15
Position Information: Permanent – Full-Time
Who May Apply: Career transition (CTAP, ICTAP, RPL), Open to the public

Biologist (Forest Bird Coordinator)
Department: Department of the Interior –
Agency: National Park Service –
Hiring Organization: Haleakala National Park
Number of Job Opportunities & Location(s): 1 vacancy – Kula, Hawaii
Salary: $66,002.00 to $85,801.00 / PA
Series and Grade: GS-0401-11
Open Period: 2020-11-20 to 2020-12-04
Position Information: Term – Full-Time
Who May Apply: Career transition (CTAP, ICTAP, RPL), Open to the public, Veterans

Some jobs listed here may no longer be available-the job may have been canceled or may have closed. Click the link for each job to see the full job announcement.

Repairs and upgrades begin for Molokai water system

Star-Advertiser

A contractor has begun a two-year project to repair and upgrade the Hoolehua Water System on Molokai, which serves thousands and is in “desperate need of repair.”

The Department of Hawaiian Home Lands, which controls the water system along with three others, held a groundbreaking ceremony on Thursday to mark the beginning of the $37 million capital improvement project, $19 million of which was allocated by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

“Among the four water systems the Department oversees, Hoolehua is the oldest and has been in desperate need of repair for some time,” said Hawaiian Homes Commission Chair Ailā in a statement. “The project highlights our state and congressional leadership’s understanding of important issues facing our rural communities as this project would not be possible without their initiative.”

Contractor Goodfellow Brothers, managed by SSFM International, will be in charge of the project, which will be built in two phases over seven construction sites. It will include the “installation of a 200,000-gallon storage tank, upgrades to automation systems, a new warehouse and a new emergency generator disel fuel tank,” DHHL said.

The project also includes the construction of new paved roads and fencing as well as the repair and replacement of tanks, pumps and other parts of the system.

The 80-year-old water system serves more than 2,400 customers, including 500 homesteads in Hoolehua-Palaau, Kalamaula and Moomomi. It also serves the post office, schools and the airport, according to the department.

DHHL said customers should expect intermittent water outages during construction.

The Hemp Farming Act Of 2018: Explained In Plain English

Black Sports Online
By Robert Littal –

A proposed statute that lawmakers eventually folded into the 2018 United States farm bill, the Hemp Farming Act of 2018 cleared the way for hemp cultivation across the nation. Prior to the law’s passing, cannabis — and by extension, hemp — had been illegal for decades. Here’s everything you need to know about the bill that made Cannaflower’s hemp buds legal throughout the country.

Broadly Speaking, What Is the Hemp Farming Act of 2018?

Laws passed between 1937 and 1950 snuffed out industrial hemp production in the United States. In the 1990s, pro-hemp lawmakers started submitting several bills and motions recommending the crop as versatile and valuable enough to be stockpiled.

The campaign steadily grew, and in 2018, legislators folded the Hemp Farming Act of 2018 into law. Specifically, the act removed cannabis products containing less than 0.3 THC — the psychoactive chemical endemic to cannabis plants that cause a “high” — from the Schedule I controlled substances list. It also made the Cannabis sativa plant a regular crop commodity, like wheat or corn.

The legislative shift created a lucrative new agricultural opportunity, and prospective hemp farmers were able to seek legitimate financial assistance and government subsidies to plant cannabis crops for the first time in decades.

What Are the Main Outcomes of the Hemp Farming Act of 2018?

To be clear, the Hemp Farming Act of 2018 didn’t make “let’s-get-high” cannabis legal in the United States. It’s a particular statute with limited allowances.

These are the six main points to understand. The Hemp Farming Act of 2018:

  1. Limits THC crop levels to 0.3 percent
  2. Requires hemp flower farmers to obtain USDA approval to grow the crop
  3. Establishes a set of strict regulations around hemp farming
  4. Demands that growers secure approval by state officials, federal officials, and law enforcement agencies before starting the cultivation process
  5. Clears a path for hemp and CBD research
  6. Reserves water rights and access to federal agricultural grants for hemp growers

Due to the act’s parameters, hemp cultivators were finally able to approach banks regarding loans — something they previously couldn’t do since the plant was a controlled, criminal substance. Moreover, thanks to the Hemp Farming Act of 2018, farmers in the niche could finally get crop insurance for cannabis fields.

What Is Hemp’s Future In the United States?

Hemp — and cannabis-product sales in general — are a booming new American industry. Since 2012, the country’s entire west coast — including Alaska and Hawaii — has legalized recreational marijuana, as have Colorado, Illinois, Michigan, and a trio of New England states. Plus, all but five states — Idaho, Wyoming, South Dakota, Wisconsin, and Kansas — have legalized medical marijuana in some form. And note that even in states where medical marijuana consumption is still outlawed, hemp farming is allowed in some capacity.

In addition to dispensaries, an offshoot industry sprouted up around marijuana legalization: CBD and hemp products, neither of which make you “high” but derive from the same Cannabis sativa plant.

States that legalized cannabis have enjoyed windfall tax revenues. As other jurisdictions start to see the industry as a surefire moneymaker, legalization is likely to sweep the nation — because, at the end of the (expensive) day, every state wants to fill its coffers.

Moreover, as the prevalence of medical marijuana expands, scientists are conducting more research, and exciting discoveries are being made that signal a bright future for palliative cannabis products — both on a prescription level and over-the-counter CBD solutions.

The Hemp Farming Act of 2018

So that’s the long and short of it: the Hemp Farming Act of 2018 essentially legalized hemp growing in the United States. But it’s not a free-for-all; you can’t buy acreage and just start growing. Hemp cultivation and manufacturing are strictly regulated — and violation punishments are harsh.