PHOTOS: UC students help baby geese get to safety

Students escort goslings off sixth-floor skyway to terra firma

In what has become a spring ritual at the University of Cincinnati, biology students on Wednesday escorted five newly hatched Canada geese from their nest atop a sixth-floor skyway bridge to terra firma where they reunited with their parents.

UC College of Arts and Sciences Professor Theresa Culley said it's become a spring ritual ever since faculty noticed the geese nesting in a planter atop the bridge between Crosley Tower and Rieveschl Hall on UC's Uptown campus about five years ago.

Students keep tabs on the nest so they can move quickly when the goslings hatch, she said.

“We call it goose watch,“ Culley said.

Students and UC Professor Kenneth Petren used brooms to gently coax the fluffy yellow goslings into a cardboard box and carried them several stories down to the grassy lawn at the edge of campus. When the adult geese heard the babies' peeps coming from the lawn below them, they flew down and joined them.

In short order, the parents reunited with their babies. Later in the day, the adults safely led their chicks across Martin Luther King Drive to the pond at Burnet Woods.

UC student photographer Emma Hite of the Bearcats Student Creative Agency captured their journey.

Students from Theresa Culley's biological sciences department escort geese and newborn goslings from campus to Burnett Woods

UC Professor Kenneth Petren and a group of graduate students coax five newly hatched Canada goslings into a cardboard box atop the skyway bridge linking Crosley Tower and Rieveschl Hall.

Students from Theresa Culley's biological sciences department escort geese and newborn goslings from campus to Burnett Woods

All five goslings finally settle into the cardboard box for their trip down the stairwell to the grass lawn below the skyway.

Students from Theresa Culley's biological sciences department escort geese and newborn goslings from campus to Burnett Woods

A nervous Canada goose looks on as UC students collect the goslings.

Students from Theresa Culley's biological sciences department escort geese and newborn goslings from campus to Burnett Woods

The geese parents hear the peeps of their babies from atop the skyway overlooking the edge of UC's Uptown campus.

Students from Theresa Culley's biological sciences department escort geese and newborn goslings from campus to Burnett Woods

The adult geese come to collect their babies from a cardboard box that students placed on its side in the protection of landscaping.

Students from Theresa Culley's biological sciences department escort geese and newborn goslings from campus to Burnett Woods

The precocious goslings hurry to catch up to the adults after their reunion on the lawn of UC's Uptown campus.

All photos/Emma Hite/UC Marketing + Brand

Related Stories

1

UC professor leads film students to the future

April 6, 2026

As a kid, at the age of 10, Marty Schiff’s dad gave him a Kodak Brownie movie camera, and that led to a lifetime of creating stories on film. He spent his summers with that camera, making eight-millimeter movies, with a camera that taught him how to thread a projector, change the film in a closet, and tell stories with the medium he loved. “I always wanted to go to Hollywood,” Schiff says. So later he did, with $200 in his pocket, and began a career that has spanned acting, directing, producing—pretty much everything with the exception of costumes (“I’m not really good with a sewing machine,” he says).

3

On track: Hoffman Honors Scholar studies public transit

April 2, 2026

Public transit is where Zane Sawyer’s lifelong passion for travel meets his commitment to making an impact. The University of Cincinnati first-year geography major in the College of Arts & Sciences and member of the second cohort of Hoffman Honors Scholars (HHS) has hit the ground running, designing a research project intended to capture both how public transit works and how its users perceive it.