How to rid park of annoying gulls stumps San Francisco Giants

Birds fly over San Francisco Giants pitcher Jake Dunning (51) as he throws against the New York Mets during the thirteenth inning of a baseball game in San Francisco, Monday, July 8, 2013. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

SAN FRANCISCO — Even the sea gulls are throwing the struggling San Francisco Giants baseball team for a loss this year.

Giants officials trying to find humane solution to the worsening onslaught of the birds at home games are stumped, the San Jose Mercury News reported Saturday.

The gulls have routinely showed up at the end of night games since the park along San Francisco Bay opened in 2000. But it appears an increasing number of birds are crashing night games this year, bothering players, workers and fans alike.

A national television audience witnessed a massive swarm in March during the World Baseball Classic semifinal between the Netherlands and the Dominican Republic, and similar invasions have occurred throughout the year.

Hundreds of gulls sometimes land on the field during play. They also defecate on fans and create cleanup headaches for staff.

Giants shortstop Brandon Crawford said batters are well aware of the birds.

“You’re focused on the pitcher,” he said. “But you definitely notice them.”

Biologists said they don’t know how the sea gulls time their arrival for the end of games to feast on discarded hot dogs, popcorn and other food.

“They are incredibly intelligent animals,” said biologist Russ Bradley, a sea gull specialist. “Unless you want to build a dome, there’s no easy answer.”

The gulls disappeared late in the 2011 season when a red-tailed hawk nicknamed “Bruce Lee” began frequenting the park. But when the hawk disappeared, the gulls returned.

Federal law prohibits shooting the birds, and hiring a falconer to scare them away would cost $8,000 a game, said Jorge Costa, the Giants’ manager of operations. The Giants are also concerned a falcon could gruesomely kill a sea gull in front of families and a television audience, Costa said.

“It’s an issue we are taking seriously,” Costa said. “But it’s delicate. You don’t want to get to the point where you do anything that looks inhumane.”

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