Since she first moved to a rocky hilltop north of Los Angeles, Cinda Mickols had grown used to the occasional sight of California condors in the distance.
In pairs or groups of three, the endangered birds – recognizable by their massive, 10-foot wingspan – would glide through the air or perch on faraway trees as she gazed out at the Tehachapi Mountains.
On Monday, however, she arrived home to find that a massive flock of the condors had descended upon – and trashed – her own property. Of all 160 birds left in the state, an “extraordinary” one in ten were congregating atop her roof or on her wooden
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