Feeding frenzy
June Casagrande
They call him the “Pigeon Master of Balboa.†Every day, often twice a
day, 74-year-old Martin Zofchak parks himself on the same bench
behind the Balboa Fun Zone to toss handfuls of bread and seed to the
70 or so pigeons he says are regulars.
They eagerly accept the meal and some will even perch on his
fingers.
“The people love to see it,†said Zofchak, an unmarried retiree
and resident of Balboa Peninsula. “The children enjoy it. Seniors who
come down for the day on buses -- they take pictures. They’ve never
seen anything like it.â€
But not everyone’s as pleased.
Hunter Stroman, manager of Marina WaterSports, is alarmed by the
possible health effects of the pigeon droppings piling up in a
densely populated area with children and outdoor dining.
“They’re basically rats with wings, everyone knows that,†Stroman
said.
Stroman has been trying to find a solution to what he considers a
festering health problem. But so far, he’s had no luck.
That is, in part, because city water-quality rules create an
ironic double-edged sword. Recently passed water-quality regulations
prohibit large-scale duck feeding, but don’t include pigeons. At the
same time, a citywide crackdown on polluted runoff makes it a no-no
for businesses to hose down their sidewalks and outdoor areas unless
they go to the expense and trouble of capturing all the water.
Stroman has hit a dead-end with city code-enforcement officials as
well as with the police. Zofchak, too, has called the police on
Stroman in a long-standing tug of war in which each says the other
crossed the line. Stroman believes that Zofchak has thrown bread and
seeds into his company’s boats just to punish Stroman. Zofchak said
that Stroman has hosed down the bench where he sits to feed the birds
in order to stop him from doing so.
So far, city officials have not been dragged into the battle.
Mayor Tod Ridgeway, whose district includes the Peninsula, said he
received a complaint from the operators of the Balboa Fun Zone -- a
complaint he referred to the city’s Code and Water Quality
Enforcement Division.
But Stroman isn’t giving up.
“I’m not trying to be a jerk and say don’t feed the birds, but you
see the birds walking through the droppings then they sometimes sit
on kids’ hands,†said Stroman, who has worked at the boat-rental
company for about seven years. “I guess I’m going to have to go to
the City Council. I think it will be a long and slow process, but it
looks like that’s what needs to be done.â€
Zofchak is equally resigned to keep up his 12-year-long ritual of
feeding his pigeon friends.
“I’m not going to stop,†Zofchak said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.