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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Dogs, Grass Enlisted In Fight Against Canada Geese Kirkland To Spend $60,000 Trying Keep Birds Out Of Park

Associated Press

Bad-tasting grass and dogs that act like predators are being added to the arsenal of weapons used to deter Canada geese in Kirkland’s waterfront parks.

Like other cities around Lake Washington, Kirkland has struggled with increasing numbers of the geese, which have stopped migrating and settled in for the long haul, messing up the parks with their droppings in the process.

The city has set aside $60,000 for the anti-geese project this year, with the goal of encouraging the birds to go elsewhere.

“It will take a while to train, or untrain, all the geese in the area,” said Mark Johnston, parks maintenance and operations manager.

As soon as next week, the city will enlist the help of a company that uses herding dogs to move the geese back into the water.

“They will not catch or hurt the geese,” but will act like predators in their motions to scare the geese away, Johnston said.

At one park, the city also will pay someone to put a non-toxic grape derivative on the grass that makes it taste bad to geese.

Both projects will be evaluated after about six months, Johnston said.

Kirkland is also part of an ongoing effort called “addling,” in which goose eggs are injected with a chemical that keeps them from maturing.

About 3,500 eggs have been addled in the past two years.

The city used to relocate geese, many to an area on the Snake River in Eastern Washington.

That effort came to halt in 1994, when the city could no longer find a place that would agree to take the birds.