The Birds
by
Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
by Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
As
I sit here on a beautiful, sunny Monday morning in Tokyo, I am serenaded
by the gentle singing of the birds. It's a wonderful chorus. We
have the Double Barred Finch, the Tree Sparrow, the Japanese Wood
Pigeon, and even the Japanese Carrion Crow (known by its scientific
name of Japonicus Corvus Garbage Collectus). It's the crows
that I have a special place for in my heart. The crows are everywhere
here in Tokyo. You can't escape from them. I hate them. They are
driving me crazy. They should all die.
While
the other birds are all chirping their songs of merriment, the crows
are "Caw, cawing" to alert the rest of their low-life rabble that
today is garbage collection day, and that means that piles of burnables
and raw food are just sitting out on the street, in government-approved
garbage bags, just so the crows can swoop down and rip them open
and toss rotting vegetables onto the roadway and on the sidewalks.
What a disgusting mess!
It
really gets bad when they find a particularly pleasing bounty of
foul-smelling rubbish and then start arguing over who gets first
dibs on ripping the bag open and taking that particularly delectably
decomposed animal or vegetable carcass away, just so they can drop
it on my balcony. Then they start bickering over who has to go rescue
the flotsam and jetsam from my place.
I
look out the screen door and wonder What the Hell is all that
racket about? There are about eight crows sitting on the power
lines all looking at me, screaming their heads off. Oh God!
Just one B-B gun, or If I could just get my hands on one of their
necks... They are so close, yet so far away! I try many tactics
to scare them away. Nothing works. Crows in Japan are not afraid
of people in the least bit. They know that people here will not
harm them. Smart-ass little.... I can't figure out why they are
hanging around so close to my balcony. Once again, I try to scare
them away by acting like I'm going to throw something at them. No
good. I'm in pain. I think I just threw my shoulder out.
Their
screaming goes on for 30 minutes. Then I see one of them hopping
on my balcony. This guy has a death wish! I run over and shoo him
away. Then I finally see the object of their desires; they've dropped
a particularly putrid persimmon on yon balcony. I dispose of it.
It's vile, all stinky and squishy and seems like... Yeech! I have
to think about something else as I scrub my hands several times
then apply rubbing alcohol.

The
Crow Problem in Tokyo is out of control. There are many reasons
for this. First off, the crows will eat whatever garbage is tossed
out by humans. So the crow population is exploding. The Japanese
try to stop the crows by putting up nets over the garbage bag piles,
but it doesn't work. The crows just find a weak spot and exploit
it. Next thing you know, there's a rancid pile of egg shells, wet
used tissue, malodorous fruit and veggies, chewed chicken bones,
empty cans of cat food, etc., all lining the street in front of
your place.
Some
people, and I'm not making this up, have resorted to putting up
"Scare-crows" to, well, scare the crows. I don't see where this
has been too effective either. The crows have been known to attack
children who come too close to their nests. The crows attack cats!
The public demand for action reaches a fevered pitch! The Tokyo
Metropolitan Government decides to take action towards reducing
the numbers of crows.
Now,
it seems to me, that there is a pretty simple way to handle this
situation. But, no! This is Japan. We just can't be blasting crows
outta the air Oh, but wouldn't that feel good? So what
does the government do? Well, they spend Gad-zillions studying the
problem. Then they start trapping the crows. What do they do with
the crows they trap? Well, they then pay to ship them to a neighboring
prefecture. Brilliant!
Well,
not quite, the head-honchos of the neighboring prefectures already
have their own crow problems, so they don't want the crows. So,
Lenny & Squiggy, who are in charge of animal control here in
Tokyo, decide to take the crows a few hundred miles out into some
country area and let them go there. That works for about a day and
a half, as the crows can fly (funny that) and make their way back
to Tokyo in time for tomorrow's all-you-can-eat breakfast buffet.
So
that's the Crow Situation here in Tokyo. They are out of control,
but the Japanese don't want to kill the birds (probably because
of Buddhism) I'll bet Buddha never had to deal with a dozen crows
screaming early in the morning stealing his garbage. So the Japanese
are terrified of the crows and the crows know it and are King of
the Hill... That is, excepting when I'm around.
The
crows fear me. And so do my neighbors... They have seen me "throwing
air" at the crows. They probably all think I'm crazy. Well, of course
I am. Those crows are everywhere and they are driving me nuts.
June
6, 2005
Mike
(in Tokyo) Rogers [send
him mail] was born and raised in the USA and moved to Japan
in 1984. He has the distinction of being fired from every FM radio
station in Tokyo – one of them three times. His first book, Schizophrenic
in Japan, is now on sale.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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