Animal Control: Dog Attacks Same New Canaan Man One Year Later

New Canaan Police this month issued a $75 nuisance dog fine to a Pound Ridge, N.Y. family after their Newfoundland attacked a town man while off-leash on a nature preserve—the second time in one year that the same canine injured the very same man. The first incident occurred last June, when the neutered male Newfie lunged at the man while he was on his bike in the Watson-Symington Preserve off of Wellesley Road, and bit him on the right leg above the knee, according to Animal Control Officer Allyson Halm. The Newfie, now 5, had been leashed at the time, Halm said. On Sunday, May 1, the same town resident had been walking his own dog in the same nature preserve when the off-leash Newfie came toward them, she said. “He grabs his dog to get it out of harm’s way and picks it up and turns his back” and is injured on both shoulders, Halm said, either scratched or bitten.

Swooping Hawk Injures New Canaan Man

A hawk swooped down from a tree Sunday morning in northwestern New Canaan and used its talons to scrape the top of a man’s head, drawing blood, officials say. The incident unfolded in the area of Lost District Drive and West Road as the man worked in his garden, according to New Canaan Animal Control Officer Allyson Halm. He and his family were aware that hawks had nested in a tree on their property and that their fledglings recently had hatched, she said. “They were actually very excited because they saw the nest and the activity and were very thrilled to have them there until [Sunday] when one swooped down and injured the guy when he was trying to work in the garden,” Halm said. New Canaanites regularly phone Animal Control about hawks—generally thought to be the common red-tailed hawk—swooping down from their nests, though it’s very unusual for one of the birds to make physical contact with a person, Halm said.

Black Bear Sighting on Old Stamford Road

Police say residents reported a black bear Tuesday morning in the area of Old Stamford Road just north of the Merritt Parkway. Multiple residents began calling in reports of the bear starting around 8 a.m., according to New Canaan Animal Control Officer Allyson Halm. Halm has said New Canaan is seeing an increasing number of black bears appear each spring. The animals often are drawn to bird feeders on residential properties. Halm encourages residents to haze the bears away.

Podcast: Wildlife in New Canaan 



This week on 0684-Radi0, our free podcast (subscribe here in the iTunes Store), we talk to Animal Control Officer Allyson Halm about wildlife in New Canaan. Here are recent episodes of 0684-Radi0: