Pair of falcons terrorize busy Chicago street to protect their offspring
IL walker sustained a 1-inch gash on his head after being attacked by the falcon
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- Chuck Valauskas was commuting home from work when a peregrine falcon smacked him in the head. He sustained a 1-inch gash on his head from the attack.
- The bird is one of two peregrine falcons that have been dive-bombing people along Wacker Drive in Chicago. The birds recently had offspring and are giving their best effort to keep people away.
- Peregrine falcons can reach up to 200 mph when diving and the local building manager warned residents to walk along a different path.
A pair of peregrine falcon parents are raising three chicks along Chicago's busy Wacker Drive, and beware to any pedestrian who ventures too closely to their nest.
Just ask Chuck Valauskas, who was struck by one of the falcons. The patent attorney was leaving work one day last week, walking below the nest situated on a seventh-floor ledge when he felt a thud on his head.
"I thought, ‘What was that?’ It felt like a 16-inch softball," Valauskas told the Chicago Sun-Times.
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He sustained a 1 inch gash on his head and now avoids the path beneath the nest altogether. Has has since gotten a tetanus shot to be safe.
At least one other person has been clobbered by the birds, building security guards said.
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Building managers have put up two signs saying, "Warning! Beware of falcons. Parents will attack to protect babies on building ledge. Take a different path."
From his window across from the nest on the 10th floor, Ruben Guardiola has been monitoring the falcons for a couple of weeks. He noticed the raptors becoming aggressive with passersby after their chicks hatched last week.
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"Look at the building. It’s built for" birds, Guardiola said. "There’s no people, no predators."
Falcons have been nesting every spring at the building since at least 2016, said Mary Hennen, who leads the peregrine program at Chicago's Field Museum.
The birds this year have nested low enough that they’ve become aggressive to humans walking below, she said.
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Peregrine falcons can reach speeds in excess of 200 mph when diving.
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"It’s just a momma protecting her young," Hennen said. "Their reflex is to swoop at you. That’s on purpose, to scare you."
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The falcons may leave in a few days or weeks, as soon as the chicks learn to fly, she said.