Flaco fever! Super fans track Central Park Zoo's escapee owl all around NYC
Briefly

"This is his new behavior now, what we're seeing," she said. "He's no longer roosting in the park, or even trees as far as we know. He's using human-made structures: air conditioners, window ledges and fire escapes, particularly ones on the inside of buildings."
"He's choosing buildings, enclosed courtyards, and backyards as a place to rest during the day," said the 59-year-old who runs the Manhattan Bird Alert account on X, formerly known as Twitter. "That's significant because it's different than what he'd been doing previously: resting in trees, mostly in Central Park."
Read at New York Post
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