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t Falcon quest I Recordnet.com Page 1 of 2 <br /> News <br /> FALCON QUEST <br /> BIRDS OF PREY PUT TO WORK AT LANDFILL DRIVING GULLS AWAY TO AVERT DANGEROUS PLANE <br /> STRIKES <br /> By Alex Breitler <br /> January 01,2011 <br /> Record Staff Writer <br /> Five seagulls, specks against the sky,winged east across Forward Landfill one recent sunny morning. <br /> Dave Rivera spotted them. He lowered his head and spoke to a speckled peregrine falcon perched on his arm. <br /> "Bill, don't let me down," Rivera said.And with that, Bill was gone. <br /> He shot through the air,first soaring upward and then diving back. Rivera kept him close by swinging, lasso-style, <br /> a leather lure baited with pulpy quail meat. <br /> Bill never went near those lofty gulls, but they saw him well enough.They abruptly turned left and, rather than <br /> circling the garbage patch,vanished to the north. <br /> "Those seagulls never get a break,"boasted Rivera,44,from Idaho. "I push them. I'll drive them all of the way off <br /> the property." <br /> Plans to expand Forward,the largest landfill in San Joaquin County,were opposed earlier this year by some pilots <br /> who use nearby Stockton Metropolitan Airport,about one mile west. More garbage means more scavenging birds <br /> and a greater chance of a bird strike,they said. <br /> A draft environmental impact report said 17 bird strikes had taken place at the Stockton airport since 1990, a <br /> number that Forward officials said was not substantial. <br /> Nevertheless,they're now rewriting the report to address these and other concerns. One new strategy includes <br /> hiring a falconer-Rivera, and his nine birds of prey-to bully the gulls until they give up and forage someplace <br /> else. <br /> Flares,whistles and bird bombs make a lot of noise, but it's the falcons that make the most difference,officials say. <br /> "You just see those gulls bolt the other way. It's terror,"said Kevin Basso, general manager of Allied Waste <br /> Services,which operates the privately owned Forward. <br /> The landfill,which is closed to the general public,faces opposition on several counts.Adjacent landowners worry <br /> about traffic and pollution;the San Joaquin Farm Bureau Federation has complained about the conversion of <br /> agricultural land to satisfy the expansion. <br /> But as for the birds, Forward believes it has that problem pecked. <br /> On that recent morning when Bill took flight,there were few gulls to be found. <br /> "What I want people to see is that this can be controlled,"Basso said. <br /> Rivera will stay at the landfill until spring,when the gulls disappear for the season. He flies all nine raptors at least <br /> once a day,always keeping an eye to the sky. <br /> He works sunup to sundown. (The gulls go someplace else at night to roost.) <br /> His truck rolls over the rutted dirt roads that crisscross the active landfill area,where big rigs dump their trash after <br /> weighing in. Sometimes,the mere sight of Rivera's truck is enough to scare off the seagulls. <br /> http://www.recordnet.com/apps/pbcs.dil/article?AID=/20110101/A NEWS/101010313/-1/... 1/1/2011 <br />