Charlottetown crow lovers show support after complaints, injured birds
CHARLOTTETOWN — Tensions between Charlottetown’s crow foes and lovers have bubbled over this winter, with a number of the birds — which roost in the thousands in the thousands in the P.E.I. capital — shot with pellet guns.
But over the last decade, there’s also been a wide embrace of the feathered residents as a cultural point of pride for the Island city, drawing strong rebukes to efforts to shoo them.
Charlottetown’s website notes the “love-hate relationship” between Charlottetonians and their winged counterparts, which the city says have come to roost in the Victoria Park and Brighton neighbourhoods during winter for more than 100 years.
“I have seen 3,000 crows going at sundown, on a calm autumn evening, in one long black silent stream of quivering pinions, to this favorite resting place,” reads an excerpt from “Birds of Prince Edward Island: Their habits and characteristics,” first published in 1891.