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After Spotting a Chicken in Central Park, an Odyssey Begins

Freya, a chicken found in Central Park by a man walking his dog, is enjoying a temporary stay at the Wild Bird Fund in Manhattan. Soon, she will be living the life of a free-range bird at a sanctuary in upstate New York.Joshua Bright for The New York Times Freya, a chicken found in Central Park by a man walking his dog, is enjoying a temporary stay at the Wild Bird Fund in Manhattan. Soon, she will be living the life of a free-range bird at a sanctuary in upstate New York.

Marc Klein was walking his dog, Cocoa, last Wednesday morning in Central Park when he spotted something rustling in the fallen leaves near the park’s entrance at West 97th Street.

It was a feathered creature, but not one of the more commonly seen wild birds in the park. This was a chicken, a handsome, reddish bird that Mr. Klein quickly scooped up because some other dogs nearby seemed a bit too interested in the animal for its safety.

“You don’t really see chickens in Central Park,” said Mr. Klein, 49. “I thought the chicken might be someone’s pet, because it allowed me to get real close. But now I’m holding this bird, and I can’t just go and put it down, because these dogs might eat it.”

So he carried both Cocoa and the chicken home to his high-rise apartment on 97th Street, drawing a stare from his doorman, and another from his wife, Laura.

Unable to immediately reach animal rescue groups, Mr. Klein, an advertising creative director, put the chicken out on his terrace, 16 stories up, and rushed to finish a presentation that was overdue.

His daughter, Alexandra, 18, told him via Facebook from her boarding school that the chicken could stay in her empty bedroom, but prospects of keeping the bird grew slimmer, as it began clucking louder and louder outside. So Mr. Klein printed up some spiffy looking fliers bearing his phone number and the chicken’s photo.

He rushed out to post them, and soon the calls were pouring in. Two were from reporters, including this one, and one was from a woman who said her friend had lost a pet rooster. Mr. Klein informed her that his new tenant was a hen.

“Another call was from a bunch of guys laughing the whole time and asking if they could get the bird fried,” he said. There was also the woman who called just to tell him about the time she and a boyfriend had their first kiss interrupted in Central Park by an ownerless chicken wearing a leash, which they took to a local police precinct.

No call came from anyone who proved to be the chicken’s owner, but there was the park ranger who suggested that Mr. Klein try the Wild Bird Fund, a wildlife rehabilitation center in a storefront on Columbus Avenue not far from his home. By dinnertime - 12 hours after finding the bird - he and the chicken were headed there in a yellow cab.

The chicken was a seven-pound Orpington, said Rita McMahon, co-founder and director of the fund, whose staff named the chicken Freya. They began ridding Freya of some internal parasites, including roundworm, and then put her on a diet of cracked corn and seed and mealworms.

“In a few days, she’ll be Superbird,” said Ms. McMahon, who a dozen years ago began taking in rescued birds at her apartment nearby. After rescuing thousands of birds , she opened the fund in the storefront in 2012.

Freya, she speculated, could have been rescued from a live poultry store by some well-intentioned bird lover seeking to save her from the slaughterer’s knife.

“People think they’ll put the chicken in the park and it will be fine,” Ms. McMahon said. “But this is not a bird that’s going to make it on the streets of New York.”

Freya was now sharing living space with other rescued birds, including a Virginia Rail that had smashed into a Midtown office building while migrating, and a mockingbird brought in from the Bronx with bad legs. There was a woodcock with a head injury, and a Coturnix quail that might have escaped while being delivered to a Japanese restaurant to become a dinner special.

There were white king pigeons dumped at the Cloisters in Fort Tryon Park in Upper Manhattan, and a red belly woodpecker with injuries to its legs and head. One worker was on the ground straddling a swan to feed the bird, which had a jaw infection.

After showing off the birds, Ms. McMahon turned to Freya, now strutting around the group’s basement dormitory. She would be taken in by Zeze, a Brazilian-born florist who has a shop on the Upper East Side and an expansive estate in Rensselaer County in upstate New York where he provides sanctuary for many birds rescued from the city.

Updated on the chicken’s odyssey, Mr. Klein said he was happy he decided to pluck her from the wilds of Central Park â€" but now he had another problem.

“Now my wife will never let me walk the dog again,” he said. “She’s worried I’ll come home with another chicken.”



New York Today: Snowstorm

The snow should start after the morning rush and get heavy by lunchtime.Mario Tama/Getty Images The snow should start after the morning rush and get heavy by lunchtime.

Good Tuesday morning. The season’s first substantial snow is on its way.

The forecast calls for two to four inches, starting at the end of the morning rush and peaking in early afternoon.

Here’s what you need to know.

A winter weather advisory is in effect across the tristate area from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.

There might be a few raindrops at first, but as the storm gets going, all will be snow.

“Our concern is that there could be a narrow stripe of some heavier amounts where it could be more like five or six inches,” said Bill Goodman, a National Weather Service meteorologist.

Those heavier bands look like they’re headed right for the city.

Some suburban schools have called the day off already.

Prepare for squinting weather: gusty and white, with visibility of less than half a mile and temperatures staying near freezing.

The snow will taper off toward evening, but the ride home could be a mess.

Whatever lands will stick around: Forecast highs are in the 20s tomorrow and Thursday. Lows might hit the teens.

The city’s 365 pumpkin-color salt spreaders and 1,400 snowplows are standing by, said Kathy Dawkins of the city’s Sanitation Department..

The salt trucks go out as soon as there’s a trace of snow.

After two inches go the garbage trucks outfitted with plows.

Around 6,000 workers are on alert.

“We’re ready,” Ms. Dawkins said.

Here’s what else you need to know.

COMMUTE

Subways: Check latest status.

Rails: Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or N.J. Transit status.

Roads: Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Snow or no, alternate-side parking is in effect.

COMING UP TODAY

Outdoor events subject to cancellation.

- Elected officials and parents protest rules that would require New York City children to receive annual flu shots, at noon on the steps of City Hall.

- Mayor Bloomberg launches what the city is calling the “nation’s largest continuous outdoor public WiFi” zone on 125th Street in Harlem at 2:30 p.m.

- The 2013 United Nations Human Rights Prize recipients are honored at the U.N. at 3 p.m. [Live Webcast]

- The Madison Square Park tree lighting at 5 p.m., followed by an ugly sweater competition in which participants may don their “most tragic holiday knits,” for prizes, at 6:30 p.m. [Free]

- The authors Elizabeth Gilbert and Ann Patchett discuss their new books at the New York Public Library. It’s sold out but will be webcast.

- The Society for the Advancement of Social Studies presents “The History of Really Big Things,” such as skyscrapers and dreams, at the Bedford, a bar in Williamsburg. 7 p.m. [Free]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.

New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till about noon.

What would you like to see here to start your day? Post a comment, email us at nytoday@nytimes.com or reach us via Twitter using #NYToday.

Find us on weekdays at nytoday.com.



New York Today: Snowstorm

The snow should start after the morning rush and get heavy by lunchtime.Mario Tama/Getty Images The snow should start after the morning rush and get heavy by lunchtime.

Good Tuesday morning. The season’s first substantial snow is on its way.

The forecast calls for two to four inches, starting at the end of the morning rush and peaking in early afternoon.

Here’s what you need to know.

A winter weather advisory is in effect across the tristate area from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.

There might be a few raindrops at first, but as the storm gets going, all will be snow.

“Our concern is that there could be a narrow stripe of some heavier amounts where it could be more like five or six inches,” said Bill Goodman, a National Weather Service meteorologist.

Those heavier bands look like they’re headed right for the city.

Some suburban schools have called the day off already.

Prepare for squinting weather: gusty and white, with visibility of less than half a mile and temperatures staying near freezing.

The snow will taper off toward evening, but the ride home could be a mess.

Whatever lands will stick around: Forecast highs are in the 20s tomorrow and Thursday. Lows might hit the teens.

The city’s 365 pumpkin-color salt spreaders and 1,400 snowplows are standing by, said Kathy Dawkins of the city’s Sanitation Department..

The salt trucks go out as soon as there’s a trace of snow.

After two inches go the garbage trucks outfitted with plows.

Around 6,000 workers are on alert.

“We’re ready,” Ms. Dawkins said.

Here’s what else you need to know.

COMMUTE

Subways: Check latest status.

Rails: Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or N.J. Transit status.

Roads: Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s.

Snow or no, alternate-side parking is in effect.

COMING UP TODAY

Outdoor events subject to cancellation.

- Elected officials and parents protest rules that would require New York City children to receive annual flu shots, at noon on the steps of City Hall.

- Mayor Bloomberg launches what the city is calling the “nation’s largest continuous outdoor public WiFi” zone on 125th Street in Harlem at 2:30 p.m.

- The 2013 United Nations Human Rights Prize recipients are honored at the U.N. at 3 p.m. [Live Webcast]

- The Madison Square Park tree lighting at 5 p.m., followed by an ugly sweater competition in which participants may don their “most tragic holiday knits,” for prizes, at 6:30 p.m. [Free]

- The authors Elizabeth Gilbert and Ann Patchett discuss their new books at the New York Public Library. It’s sold out but will be webcast.

- The Society for the Advancement of Social Studies presents “The History of Really Big Things,” such as skyscrapers and dreams, at the Bedford, a bar in Williamsburg. 7 p.m. [Free]

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.

New York Today is a morning roundup that stays live from 6 a.m. till about noon.

What would you like to see here to start your day? Post a comment, email us at nytoday@nytimes.com or reach us via Twitter using #NYToday.

Find us on weekdays at nytoday.com.