North

Costco customers in Alaska victimized by ravens

"My parents were minding their business after a shop and made it home with one less steak!" Kimberly Waller wrote on Facebook. "The bird snatched it right out of the pack in the parking lot."

'They know what they're doing; it's not their first time'

A raven carries food in its beak as it sits atop a sign in a Costco parking lot on March 24 in south Anchorage, Alaska. People have been sharing stories on social media of ravens stealing food from their carts while they load groceries into their vehicles. (Loren Holmes/Anchorage Daily News via The Associated Press)

Some Alaska Costco shoppers said they've had their groceries stolen by ravens in the store parking lot.

Matt Lewallen said he was packing his groceries into his car in the parking lot of an Anchorage Costco when ravens swooped in to steal a short rib from his cart, the Anchorage Daily News reported Friday.

"I literally took 10 steps away and turned around, two ravens came down and instantly grabbed one out of the package, ripped it off and flew off with it," Lewallen said.

Lewallen said the piece of meat was about 4-by-7 inches (10-by-18 centimeters) large — a sizable meal for a sizable bird.

"They know what they're doing; it's not their first time," Lewallen said. "They're very fat so I think they've got a whole system there."

And once he got back home, he noticed that one of the ravens had taken a poke at another rib but did not rob it.

"I cut that meat out and started marinating it and my wife said, `That's gross, we should take it back,' " Lewallen said. "Costco actually took it back even after we had started marinating them and gave us a full refund."

A raven investigates the contents of a shopping cart while another walks by on the ground in a Costco parking lot on March 24 in south Anchorage, Alaska. (Loren Holmes/Anchorage Daily News via The Associated Press)

Additional raven thief sightings have emerged on social media.

"My parents were minding their business after a shop and made it home with one less steak!" Kimberly Waller wrote on Facebook. "The bird snatched it right out of the pack in the parking lot."

Anchorage resident Tamara Josey replied to Waller's post and referred to the ravens as "calculating." She said ravens hovered over her in an attempt to steal her groceries.

"I had two ravens, one that was on the car next to me and he kept squawking really loud," Josey said.

"He would sit on the car and stare at me, then hop next to the bed of the truck on the other side, and he kept going back and forth. The other raven was on the ground. He kept trying to pull — I had those little mini-melons you have in the mesh baggies — he kept trying to grab the netting and pull my melons off the cart."

'Dedicated to their mission'

A raven started to fly in a circle around Josey until she got them to scram.

"He was waiting for another opportunity to grab the melons off the cart, but they never were deterred," she said. "They just stayed posted, waiting for their next opportunity to steal something out of my cart."

"They are very dedicated to their mission," she added.

A manager at an Anchorage Costco declined to comment to the newspaper about the raven thieves.

The Anchorage Audubon Society tallies the raven population every December. The group reported 923 common ravens in 2018, 621 in 2019 and 750 in 2020.

Rick Sinnott, a former wildlife biologist with the state Department of Fish and Game, said hundreds of ravens fly to Anchorage in the winter for food. After winter turns to spring, most of the ravens leave, Sinnott said.

But before they do, the ravens stick around to pluck assorted meats, fruits and vegetables.

"For years, decades, they've watched people in parking lots of grocery stores with all this food," Sinnott said. "They know what a piece of fruit looks like in a grocery cart because they've seen it on the ground or seen it in a garbage can."