Robin Nest With 4 Hatchlings Keeps Sold Ford F-250 at Kansas Lot
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 22
Robin Nest With 4 Hatchlings Keeps Sold Ford F-250 at Kansas Lot
10 articles · Updated · The Guardian · May 22
A sold Ford F-250 in Olathe, Kansas, still cannot leave the dealership because a robin family is nesting on one tire.
The delay stems from the 1918 Migratory Bird Treaty Act, which protects active robin nests; employees first spotted the nest weeks ago, then watched four blue eggs hatch.
Olathe Ford Lincoln said the buyer has agreed to wait until the chicks leave safely, and the dealership sought guidance from Kansas wildlife nonprofit Operation Wildlife.
Facebook posts and videos of the birds—named Lugnut, Turbo, Diesel and Axel—have gone viral, turning an unusual delivery delay into a widely shared lesson on federal bird protections.
How did a dealership turn a legal delay over a bird's nest into a viral marketing win?
Does a century-old law justify holding a new truck hostage for a family of common robins?
When federal law blocks a major purchase, what are the hidden costs and rights for the consumer?