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   Man devotes life to knowin wild birds 三蕃市的鸚鵡守護者
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深藍 Owen
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Man devotes life to knowin wild birds 三蕃市的鸚鵡守護者
« on: May 31st, 2005, 9:51am »
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will anybody going to do this in HKG?
 
Film shows calm, intelligent man, parrots; Documentary follows man who devotes life to knowing wild birds  
Mark Bittner is calm, intelligent, confiding, wise and well-spoken. You would be happy to count him as your friend. He has not worked in 30 years, has lived on the street for 15 of them, and in recent years has devoted his life to getting to know 45 wild parrots that formed a flock in San Francisco. It takes a lot of time to get to know 45 wild parrots as individuals, but as he points out, ``I have all the time in the world.'' Related Topics  
Environment  
 
The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill, a documentary about Bittner and his birds by Judy Irving, is making its way around the country as an underground phenomenon, fueled by fans who urge their friends to see it. It is not the film you think it is going to be. You walk in expecting some kind of North Beach weirdo and his wild-eyed parrot theories, and you walk out still feeling a little melancholy over the plight of Connor, the only blue-crowned conure in a flock of red-crowned conures.  
Connor had a mate, Bittner tells us, but the mate died. Now Connor hangs around with the other parrots but seems lonely and depressed, a blue-crowned widower who can sometimes get nasty with the other birds but comes to the defense of weak or sick birds when the flock picks on them. Picasso and Sophie, both red-crowned parrots, are a couple until Picasso disappears; Bittner begins to hope that maybe Connor and Sophie will start to date and produce some purple-headed babies.  
Nobody knows how the parrots, all born in the wild and imported from South America, escaped captivity, found one another and started their flock. Irving has several North Beach residents recite the usual urban legends (they were released by an eccentric old lady, a bird truck overturned, etc). No matter. They live and thrive.  
You would think it might get too cold in the winter for these tropical birds, but no: They can withstand cold fairly well, and the big problem for them is getting enough to eat. Indeed, flocks of wild parrots and parakeets exist in colder climates; the famous colony of parakeets in Chicago's Hyde Park was evicted from some of its nests only recently, after 15 or 20 years, because the birds were interfering with utility lines.  
Oddly, most bird-lovers seem to resent trespassers such as wild parrots on the grounds that they are outside their native range. That the parrots are here through no fault of their own, that they survive and thrive and are intelligent and beautiful birds, is enough for Mark Bittner, and by the end of the film that's enough for us, too.  
He gives us brief biographies of some of the birds. Sometimes he takes them into his home when they're sick or injured, but after they recover they all want to return to the wild -- except for Mingus, who keeps trying to get back into the house. Their biggest enemies are viruses and hawks. The flock always has a hawk lookout posted and has devised other hawk-avoidance tactics, of which the most ingenious is to fly BEHIND a hawk, which can only attack straight ahead and has a wider turning radius than parrots.  
Bittner originally came to San Francisco, he tells us, seeking work as a singer. That didn't work out. He lived on the streets, did odd jobs, read a lot, met some of the original hippies (Ginsberg, Ferlinghetti, Gary Snyder). For the three years before the film begins, he has lived rent-free in a cottage below the house of a wealthy couple who live near the parrots on Telegraph Hill. Now he is about to be homeless again, while the cottage is renovated into an expensive rental property. The parrots are threatened with homelessness, too, and Bittner testifies on their behalf before the City Council. San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom vows nothing bad will happen to the parrots.  
As Bittner tends and feeds his flock, visitors to Telegraph Hill want to categorize him. Is he a scientist? Paid by the city? What's his story? His story is, he finds the parrots fascinating and lovable.  
He quotes Gary Snyder: ``If you want to study nature, start right where you are.''  
Copyright 2005, Akron Beacon Journal. All rights reserved.  
« Last Edit: Jun 4th, 2005, 10:27pm by Webcreeper » Logged


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