Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘scream’

Photo: Nicolas Brunetti.
Peacocks started roaming the streets of Punta Marina, Italy, during Covid. Now, love them or hate them, they’re there to stay. 

Around here we get too many Canada geese. A town in Italy, however, gets too many peacocks. Which would you rather have? From my experience at a friend’s home years ago, I’d rather have geese early in the morning. Peacocks are loud.

Angela Giuffrida writes at the Guardian, “Federico Bruni was sitting on a bench, eating a piadina romagnola (flatbread sandwich) and minding his own business, when a peacock strutted up in the hope of a few crumbs. High-pitched squeals emanated from the direction of a disused military barracks across the road. ‘That would be the call to love,’ Bruni said. ‘The male peacocks are courting the female ones – we’re in peak mating season.’

“As another couple of peacocks wandered by, their iridescent trains sweeping the pavement behind them, this could be mistaken for a wildlife park. But the scene is Punta Marina, a seaside town on the Adriatic coast of Italy’s Emilia-Romagna region that has been colonized by the birds, to the delight – or despair – of its approximately 1,000 residents.

“The birds have made their home in the gardens of abandoned properties and perch on rooftops and fences, or peek out from trees. They carefully navigate the traffic, sometimes tapping their beaks on the windows of parked cars after catching their reflection. …

“They don’t bother Bruni, who frequently comes to his holiday home in Punta. ‘It’s no different to seeing a cat, really, they’re part of the fabric of the town,’ he said.

“Others are less welcoming. ‘There are too many of them,’ said Francesco, who preferred not to give his surname. ‘They jump over the wall and on to my balcony, leaving excrement. But the main issue is the mating – the screams are keeping people awake.’ …

“Historically a symbol of immortality, peacocks feature in many of nearby Ravenna’s prized Byzantine mosaics, and over the centuries they became status symbols, once adding color to the resplendent gardens of Emilia-Romagna’s wealthy residents.

“How they settled in Punta Marina is a mystery – although there are reports they were brought in as pets by a resident more than 20 years ago. … For a long time, the peacocks lived in the sprawling pine forest behind the town. But then came Covid in 2020, and for months the peacocks roamed free while people were in lockdown. The occasional human they came across gave them food, enticing them to return. …

“Rosario Balestrieri, an ornithologist at the Naples-based Anton Dohrn zoological station, said … ‘Supplementary feeding actively provided by the local population has encouraged steady population growth.’

“While people were used to the birds’ more prominent presence at this time of year, the mating period, a recent social media post from a disgruntled female resident imitating the mating scream has gone viral, creating a media frenzy. A local police officer said some resulting reports – depicting an ‘invasion’ of peacocks forcing people away from the town because of a possible threat to public health – were wildly exaggerated.

“Still, the high profile tensions have left Ravenna city council, which in recent years has been grappling with how to manage Punta Marina’s peacock population, with a dilemma. An attempt to move them in 2022 was opposed, and after that, Clama, a voluntary animal rights association, was enlisted to protect the peacocks and encourage harmony.

“Clama has produced leaflets and put up signs to teach residents and tourists about the birds, saying they absolutely must not be fed.

“ ‘If they know it’s easier to come and snack on a sandwich in the town rather than having to forage for their own food in the pine forest, then of course they will keep coming back,’ said Cristina Franzoni, a volunteer with Clama, adding that people who fed the peacocks could be fined. …

“ ‘Peacock rangers,’ who can be called on to clean up poo from the streets, homes or the wheels of cars have been recruited to defuse tensions. …

“Other Italian regions have offered to ‘adopt’ the birds, but Franzoni said removing them was not the solution and would cause ‘trauma.’ She said: ‘We need to try to live with the animals instead of making them victims of our choices – they didn’t choose to come here, we brought them here and so must respect them.’ “

More at the Guardian, here. No firewall. Nice photos, including a charming peacock mosaic from Ravenna.

Read Full Post »

Photo: Reuters/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
Visitors play music and talk together in a Cairo, Egypt, bookshop where the new “scream room” is found.

There’s a rather unusual bookstore in Cairo: one that offers customers a room where, if they feel the need to scream, they can just let it rip. No charge for ten minutes.

“Visitors to a bookshop in Cairo are being invited into a dark, soundproof room to scream at the top of their lungs in an effort to relieve their frustrations and escape from the stresses of daily life.

“The new ‘scream room’ is tucked away in the ‘The World’s Door’ bookshop and is also equipped with a full drum kit allowing customers to let go of their worries …

“Owner AbdelRahman Saad offers each visitor ten minutes inside the private scream room, free of charge. He believes it is the first room of its kind in the Middle East.

” ‘I entered it at a time when I was really stressed and came out much more relaxed,’ said frequent visitor Mohamed el-Debbaby. ‘What’s even better is that I was able to find solutions to the problem I was facing.” More here.

(Reporting by Reuters Television; Writing by Adela Suliman; Editing by Patrick Johnston/Jeremy Gaunt)

Photo: Reuters/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
Mohamed el-Debbaby, a dentist, screams in a soundproof room inside a bookshop in Cairo in an effort to escape from the stresses of daily life.

Read Full Post »