
 
        
         
		COURIER L 12     IFE, MARCH 19-25, 2021 
 Protecting our  
 feathered friends  
 Bird club fundraising to ‘bird-proof’ bay 
 Dennis Hrehowsik (left), president of the Brooklyn Bird Club in front of the “bird-proofed”  
 Salt Marsh Nature Center.  Photo by Dennis Hrehowsik 
 BY JESSICA PARKS 
 Brooklyn bird enthusiasts are raising  
 funds to prevent avian collisions in  
 Jamaica Bay — aiming to install birdsafe  
 fi lm on the windows at a local wildlife  
 refuge, which they hope will inspire  
 others to consider “bird-proofi ng.” 
 “One of the things we would love to  
 do is to try to convince people to treat  
 their windows to try to make them birdsafe  
 and  collision-safe,”  said  Dennis  
 Hrehowsik, president of the centuryold  
 Brooklyn Bird Club. “We thought a  
 great place to start would be the buildings  
 in Jamaica Bay and within the  
 National Parks Services system that  
 both have a lot of bird traffi c.” 
 While the City Council passed regulations  
 in December 2019 requiring new  
 or altered buildings to use glazed or patterned  
 glass to cut down on bird deaths  
 and window strikes, there are no such  
 requirements for existing structures. 
 The Brooklyn Bird Club has been  
 working  to  bird-proof  borough  buildings  
 for over a year, the club’s president  
 said, and has already raised $10,000,  
 which funded bird-safe fi lm  for  the  
 Salt Marsh Nature Center  in Marine  
 Park that was installed in October, and  
 kick-started its latest endeavor — outfi  
 tting the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge  
 Center. “We were able to get most  
 of the way there,” Hrehowsik said. 
 The birders are now seeking an additional  
 $5,000  to  bird-proof  the  refuge  
 center  in  neighboring  Queens  
 this April — and have received nearly  
 $1,500 in donations just one day since  
 launching their online fundraiser. 
 “We could have gotten the part of  
 the Jamaica Bay wildlife center that  
 was most problematic with the $10,000  
 but we thought, since we are going to be  
 in there, let’s get the whole thing done,”  
 Hrehowsik said. “Let’s raise a little bit  
 of capital and do it the right way.”  
 Bird-proofi ng  requires  pasting  a  
 fi lm over the clear glass window that  
 contains an image or pattern that  
 breaks up the refl ection  of  the  environment  
 around it to signal that a bird  
 should change course, Hrehowsik said.  
 “Basically, a refl ecting  window  
 looks like sky to a bird so it thinks it  
 can keep going,” he said. “And these  
 patterns  sort  of  break  up  that  clean  
 line that the bird thinks  it has in the  
 window so it realizes it has to turn.” 
 The  fi lm  can  also  be  visually-appealing, 
  Hrehowsik added, pointing to  
 the work done at the visitor’s center at  
 the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. 
 “Having seen some of these fi lms, they  
 are quite attractive actually and are really  
 cool,” Hrehowsik said. “It can actually add  
 something aesthetically to your building  
 to take part in one of these projects.”  
 The windows of the Salt Marsh Nature  
 Center  in Marine  Park  are  now  
 outfi tted with a dotted pattern, which  
 is one of the more common designs  
 used to prevent bird collisions. 
 New York City is a major thoroughfare  
 for birds migrating north and  
 south, and clear-glass windows lead to  
 hundreds of thousands of avian deaths  
 per year, the bird club president said. 
 “What people don’t realize is they  
 think  of New  York  City  as  this manmade  
 megatropolis, and it is,” Hrehowsik  
 told  Brooklyn  Paper,  “but  it  
 has always been a crossroads. Before it  
 was a trading point, it was always the  
 Atlantic Flyway where birds the last  
 40,000 years since the Pleistocene have  
 fl own over on their migration.”  
 The Jamaica Bay-Rockaway Parks  
 Conservancy, NYC Audubon and  
 American Littoral Society are all partnering  
 with the Brooklyn Bird Club to  
 help bird-proof Jamaica Bay.