You are reading

Injured Chicken Found in Beer Box in Astoria Park

Photo credit: Phyllis Tseng/Wild Bird Fund

Feb. 22, 2021 By Christina Santucci

A chicken found in a beer box in Astoria Park last weekend is on the mend at a Manhattan bird rehab center.

The rescued hen, now named Lily, is being treated for bumblefoot and other potential infections, but is still a bit lethargic, a spokesperson for the Wild Bird Fund said Sunday.

“Otherwise, hopefully she’ll be fine,” the spokesperson said.

Astoria resident Brianne Hernandez found the chicken in Astoria Park at around 8:30 p.m. Feb 13. She said she had been walking with her husband and dog when her husband spotted a Heineken beer box.

“He was joking, Oh, people must have been drinking and sledding,” she said.

Her dog peeked into the box then backed away as if frightened, so Hernandez’s husband went to check it out.

Surprisingly, a live chicken was inside.

“It was so random,” Hernandez said. “If my dog hadn’t realized, we would have kept walking.”

She posted on a neighborhood Facebook group, asking what to do and found out about the Wild Bird Fund. Hernandez was worried about taking the chicken home because she was due to have a baby any day, and she didn’t know how Parker, her 90-pound German Shepard, would react to the hen.

So a family who had been sledding nearby agreed to bring the chicken to the Manhattan rescue facility the next day.

The Wild Bird Fund said the chicken was spared from hypothermia or starvation.

“It made me happy to know that we were able to rescue her and save her because it was really cold that night,” Hernandez said.

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Long Islander ordered to pay restitution for stealing share of Queens Village family home willed to niece: DA

A Long Island man was sentenced Wednesday in Queens Supreme Court for filing fraudulent paperwork to claim he fully owned a Queens Village home when his niece had actually inherited half of it. Wagner Recio, 52, of Butler Boulevard in Elmont, pleaded guilty in December 2022 to filing falsified documents the previous year in order to obtain a mortgage against the value of the Queens Village property and kept the financial proceeds for himself.

According to the charges, Recio and his brother, Alejandro Recio, jointly owned a house on 220th Street in Queens Village as Tenants in Common (TIC), allowing each owner undivided interest to sell, transfer or borrow against their own share in the property.

Queens Village man identified as victim in fatal shooting at South Ozone Park nightclub: NYPD

Homicide detectives from the 106th Precinct in Ozone Park are still investigating the cause of a fatal shooting that occurred early Monday morning in front of a South Ozone Park nightclub. While they have yet to identify the gunman or establish a motive, they have determined the victim’s identity and notified his family.

The NYPD announced on Tuesday evening that Temel Phillips of 102nd Avenue in Queens Village was the man who was shot multiple times in front of the Caribbean Fest Lounge at 116-14 Rockaway Blvd., more than nine miles away from his home.

Op-ed: Making the change: Illegal cannabis stores will now be closed!

May. 1, 2024 By Assemblymember Stacey Pheffer Amato

I am currently writing this in the early hours after intensely debating the State Budget. As your State representative, I have been working to pass fiscal policies that represent the needs of our community. Moments ago, our community scored a tremendous victory as I voted yes and passed into law the hard stance against illegal cannabis shops that we have all asked for. Finally, the law gives law enforcement the ability to close these stores and padlock them shut!