And Now, a Word From Dallas’ Food and Drink Industry on 2020
We asked chefs, restaurateurs, bar owners, bakers, and other industry insiders about this rollercoaster of a year. Here s what they said.
By
Eve Hill-Agnus, Rosin Saez, Kathy Wise
Published in
Food & Drink
December 22, 2020
4:01 pm
“How was this year for you?” is a typically simple question come late December. But 2020 was not typical and it definitely wasn’t simple. So when we queried some of Dallas’ prominent voices in the food realm, we figured answers would be justifiably…fraught. We wanted to know how they weathered 2020, but also what they’re leaving behind and what they’re looking forward to in the new year. Without further ado, a look back at the bizarre, tragic, sometimes uplifting, but never not unique, 2020.
Skip to main content
Some of San Francisco s iconic wild parrots are sick. Meet the people who are saving them.
FacebookTwitterEmail
As soon as she wakes up, the Chief Operations Officer of Mickaboo (a nonprofit bird rescue and adoption organization) spends two hours checking on each of the cherry-headed conures, most of whom are named after the San Francisco streets where they were found:
Injured or sick and therefore deemed non-releasable to their urban habitat, the parrots fostered by Lemarié are dwelling in her living room for the time being until they can find a permanent new home.
She feeds them a mix of pellets and fresh vegetables with a bit of fruit, usually lingering at the towel-lined cage belonging to Clay. Half of the wild parrots in Lemarié’s home show signs of bromethlian poisoning – a commonly used rodenticide – but Clay’s symptoms might be the most apparent: His head droops to the side. He can’t perch or fly very well. The towels,
Skip to main content
Some of San Francisco s iconic wild parrots are sick. Meet the people who are saving them.
FacebookTwitterEmail
1of14
Mooshi and Julian are two cherry-headed conures fostered by Sarah Lemarié, a volunteer for Mickaboo, a bird rescue and nonprofit organization.Courtesy of Sarah Lemarié and MickabooShow MoreShow Less
2of14
Beale and Clay snuggle together in their cage.Courtesy of Sarah Lemarié and MickabooShow MoreShow Less
3of14
5of14
6of14
7of14
8of14
9of14
11of14
Two cherry-headed conures perch on a tree in San Francisco.Thomas Winz/Getty ImagesShow MoreShow Less
12of14
13of14
A cherry-headed conure part of the wild flock in San Francisco perches in a tree.Jorge Figueiredo/Getty ImagesShow MoreShow Less