Community Corner

2 Rare Swans Rescued On North Fork 'Meet New Friends': WATCH

Watch a video of the swans, who captured the hearts of a hometown, as they get settled in their new digs and meet friends on the water.

Two rare black swans that captured the hearts of a community on the North Fork are making friends at their new forever home.
Two rare black swans that captured the hearts of a community on the North Fork are making friends at their new forever home. (Lisa Finn / Patch)

NORTH FORK, NY — Two rare Australian black swans saved from a Southold creek are settling in to their new forever home in North Carolina.

"Our two newest residents: They have completed their quarantine and are walking over to the general population to meet their new friends, and see their new forever home!" wrote Skywatch Bird Rescue on Instagram.

John Di Leonardo, president of Long Island Orchestrating for Nature, recently led a transport with the swans, more than 50 chickens he said had fallen off a slaughterhouse-bound truck in New York City, two Toulouse geese abandoned in Rockland County, two Muscovy ducks surrendered by a live slaughter market, and about a dozen mixed domestic ducks who were rescued either from abandonment or a now-shuttered petting zoo, he said.

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All were brought to Skywatch Bird Rescue, a not-for-profit dedicated to caring for abandoned or injured birds, where, Di Leonardo said: "These magnificent animals will have acres to roam and socialize with members of their own species, be provided shelter and veterinary care, and be loved and cared for— and never exploited for their flesh or entertainment."

The black swans, because they were domesticated and were likely abandoned by whoever owned them, were unable to defend themselves against wild swans that were attacking them, neighbors said.

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A group of caring neighbors sprang into action and jumped on their kayaks to shepherd the swans to safety. But many neighbors worked together to save them, grabbing their kayaks to help — as did Di Leonardo and Karen Testa of Turtle Rescue of the Hamptons.

After hours on the water, when Di Leonardo arrived, the kayakers formed a human perimeter to corral the swans toward where he was waiting to capture them with a large net.

The black swans, he said, were not indigenous to the area and were likely raised in captivity, Di Leonardo said. Australia also has a very different climate, he said. "Come winter, they'd be dead. But they'd likely have been dead before that. They don't know our natural predators and they don't have a healthy fear of humans, as they should."

It's humans who are at fault for abandoning them, he said. "Whoever let them go, left them to a death sentence," he said.

Also, introducing the swans was disruptive to the entire ecosystem; they might have killed a wild swan — or, they might have spread infection, Di Leonardo said. Fowl abandonment has a detrimental effect from health, welfare, and environmental standpoints, he said.

Di Leonardo reminded that it is a crime to abandon a domesticated animal in the wild.

Reflecting on the rescue, resident Dana Kuhl, who helped to save the swans, said: "We felt honored to be part of the rescue team. When we all come together to help anything is possible."

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