British Columbia

Crow attack in East Vancouver caught on video terrifies cyclist

Steven Huynh was riding along on his way to work when he met a man petting a crow on the side walk. When he stopped his bike to get a better look, things got serious.

Crow jumps on victim's back and pecks his neck

Crow attacks Steven Huynh

9 years ago
Duration 0:47
Cyclist shoots video of crow all over him

Steven Huynh was riding on his way to work Friday when he met a man petting a crow on the side walk. When he stopped his bike to get a better look, things got serious.

The crow took off from the ground and started attacking him.

"It attacked my knuckle," said Huynh from his home. "When it was on my back, that's was when I was terrified because I couldn't look back."

Nineteen-year-old Steven Huynh points to a cut that was caused by a crow attack in East Vancouver. (CBC)

Active on YouTube, the 19-year-old grabbed his camera and started rolling.

"How often do you see something like that, right?"

Huynh says he had no idea why the bird chose to attack him. He had no food on him and did not antagonize the bird. However, it seemed the bird was fixated on an orange stripe on his backpack.

Intelligent Beings

Derek Matthews from the Vancouver Avian Research says crows are different from other birds because they can recognize and remember faces — particularly if someone has fed or harassed them.

He believes this crow may have seen similarities between Huynh or his backpack and a past encounter.

"They will get to know people as individuals," said Matthews. "This is almost certainly what's happened in this situation."

As for the man who was seemed to have a relationship with the crow, Matthews says that's entirely possibility. If a crow is fed over a continuous period of time, it may follow an individual.

His advice to anyone who comes across an unruly crow is to just keep moving along and remember, "crows are not evil ... they're just trying live their lives, feed their families, feed themselves, just like we are."