The screams were collected in the House of Timbre.
The video shows Jory Harris and his hurried roommates to enter his home in Waterloo, Ontario, while a Canadian goose flies them.
Harris, a student from the Wilfrid Laurier University, has shared a Tiktok compilation video of a pair of “angry” geese that attack people.
“We can’t even get out of our house. He’s so angry. Now there is a nest there. So in reality, we just don’t know what to do,” he said about one of the geese.
Harris said that earlier this month, he returned to class house when he noticed two geese on his grass. She speculated with her roommates about what would happen if the geese started a nest, but everyone assumed that the front grass of a house would not be an ideal place for one and the geese would advance.
They were wrong.
“It’s still out at this time, only in our front garden,” said Harris.
‘The crosss flew’
Harris’s video shows a friend who wears a box of 20 costco crosss that ends up falling after a goose runs it.
“The crosss flew and then the geese started eating them,” he said.
She said that she and her roommates are sneaky along the door of her side and enter the backyard to avoid geese, but Harris said they also made corn popcorn and have seen the images of their ring camera while the offices walked and are accustomed.
“A girl, like, fell into a bush,” said Harris. “Everyone is falling and just, they simply go up again and keep running.”
Harris said they have asked local animals for help to eliminate geese, but they have been told to be patients and that they cannot be done much.
Look | Tiktok’s video shows people who escape from nesting geese:
Goesos ‘especially protective’ during the nesting season
The issue of aggressive geese in Waterloo is not new.
In 2015, a turkey was intimidated by geese on the Campus of the University of Waterloo (UW). The turkey flew to a window on the third floor of a building and died.
That same year, some students called a particularly aggressive goose the “engendro of Satan” and for several years, someone else in UW created a map of goose watches to help others on the campus to avoid the Angry Birds.
Guelph human society recently published guidelines on how people should deal with Canadian geese in spring.
Human society said the nesting season lasts only a few weeks, but geese can be “especially protective” during that time.

“Geese often choose nesting sites that offer open and open views to help them detect potential predators. While their options can sometimes surprise us, these places offer the safety and visibility they need to successfully raise their goslings,” said society.
Human society also shared tips to share space with geese this spring, including:
- Give them space by giving them a wide liter or taking an alternative route.
- Keep dogs with a strap around the nests to prevent geese from being stressed.
- Be attentive to the families of moving geese. They will walk their young to nearby water.
- Be patient, since most nests are active for less than a month before moving forward.
Human society pointed out that Canada’s geese are protected by the Law on the Convention of Migratory Birds, which means that it is illegal to alter or move a nest.
Lisa Vel, executive director of human society, said it is important to remember that geese follow their instincts every spring.
“Back to the same places, build nests and raise their young: it is a notable reminder that nature surrounds us, even in occupied urban spaces.”