Fort Collins, Colo., had its own “Father Goose” – Gurney Ivan Crawford (1903-84). He spent his entire career as a Colorado state wildlife conservation officer and successfully introduced Canada geese to this region of the Rocky Mountains.
Crawford
once told a news reporter that he literally took the first brood of goslings
under his wing in 1957, saying: “It’s what I live for – these birds.”
It’s
quite a love story. Erin Udell, a reporter at the Fort Collins Coloradoan said that
Jack Grieb, chief of the waterfowl division, came by the Crawford home one day
with a clutch of goose eggs that he had collected in Denver, about 60 miles
south of Fort Collins. He simply said: “Hatch ‘em, Gurney.”
“Crawford
did just that, using his own Bantam hens as impromptu foster moms, as well as
hot water bottles and incubators to warm and hatch the eggs,” Udell said. “When
the eggs hatched, the hens got a big surprise in the fuzzy little goslings that
emerged.”
At nine weeks old, the first group of Canada goslings were released at College Lake, about three miles from Colorado State University’s main campus in Fort Collins.
“Crawford continued to raise goslings in his home and built nesting structures that kept predators away from unhatched eggs,” Udell wrote.
“Known for their intelligence and strong family ties – geese mate for life and flocks stick together – the birds on College Lake got to know Crawford so well they could single out his truck as he drove up to see them,” Udell added.
“The project was a hit as the geese settled into the northern Front Range of the Rockies, which has the perfect combination of scattered ponds and reservoirs, agricultural crops like corn and grains, and fresh grass to feed on,” she said.
Dr. Jim Gammonley, who leads the avian research team for Colorado Parks and Wildlife, told Udell that Colorado’s resident geese population has stabilized between 20,000 to 30,000, with several thousand of those making their home in Fort Collins and the surrounding area.”
The project was highly successful in boosting recreational opportunities like hunting and bird watching.
The new resident flock also attracted migratory Canada geese, using the Central Flyway between the Arctic and the American Southwest, to stop in Northern Colorado during the winter, when they would typically fly straight to New Mexico, Udell wrote.
Dr. Gammonley estimates that nowadays, 200,000 migratory Canada geese can be found statewide in Colorado during the winter season.
Sixty years ago, the human population of Fort Collins was about 25,000. The community has since mushroomed to about 172,000 people in 2026.
“With human population growth,” Dr. Gammonley said, “we began seeing more human-goose conflicts.”
Phil Bourjaily, a columnist with Field & Stream magazine, said the “hefty honkers” present some challenges. He notes that a goose can poop a pound a day.
Several years ago, Denver launched a goose-culling operation. It rounded up urban-dwelling geese and carried them off to a nearby meat processing plant. Protest rallies ensued, expressing horror. Signage claimed: “Goose Lives Matter.”
Bourjaily said that Vicki Vargas-Madrid, Denver’s current wildlife program manager, is a proponent of using “non-lethal methods to contain the flock.”
One tool is the “Goosinator,” a remote-controlled fan boat painted like a bright orange shark. The contraption operates on lakes and ponds in a zigzag pattern to mimic a predator, triggering thousands of birds to take flight.
“The hope is the strategy will encourage the geese to migrate out of Denver,” Bourjaily said.
Meanwhile, Denver’s Canada geese protection society and city officials are hopeful that conversations for attaining a “sustainable, multi-species environment” will be productive.


























































