A Boston woman got the surprise of her life when she discovered crazed turkeys attacking her Audi convertible and scratching the paintwork.
Alicia Mastroianni, 26, was about to head out again after her night shift at Boston Children's Hospital on Monday when she noticed a note on her car's windshield, parked outside of her apartment.
'I just watched (and recorded) a massive turkey attack your car for over 15 mins! It looks pretty scratched up :( I tried to scare it away but it ignored me,' the note by her across-the street neighbor read. 'Not sure what insurance coverage there is for car turkey attacks.'
The healthcare worker was perplexed, and said she wasn't sure how she was going to explain her situation without others questioning whether or not she was lying.
'You can't just say, "Oh, my car was attacked by a turkey." Without proof, it sounds insane,' Mastroianni told the Boston Globe.
A while turkey caught on video losing its temper and damaging a woman’s car went viral on TikTok.
On the afternoon of July 15, Alicia Mastroianni was on her way to work her overnight shift at Boston Children’s Hospital when she spotted a note on her car.
“You’re already a little out of it. Saw the note was like, ‘Oh, gosh, someone hit my car,'” said Mastroianni.
But the note was from a friendly neighbor who captured a turkey damaging her car.
“It says, ‘I just watched and recorded a massive turkey attack your car for over 15 minutes. Sorry, you were the target of this turkey rage,'” said Mastroianni.
The wild turkey did a number on her car.
a turkey violently attacking a parked car in Boston for 15 minutes. The motive may be linked to its reflection.
It’s a case of Angry Birds: A Boston woman said a turkey attacked her black convertible, and it was all caught on camera.
A viral video captured a wild turkey pecking at its reflection, not in a mirror, but the side of Alicia Mastroianni’s black car.
“Oh my gosh it was just so beat up,” Mastroinanni, who lives in the city’s Brighton section, said of her scratched-up Audi convertible.
Mastroinanni said she has been living off of Cummings Street for nearly a year with no previous encounters with wildlife in the neighborhood, but when she woke up in the early afternoon of July 15 before a night shift at Boston Children’s Hospital, she walked out to her car and found a note.
“I get in and I start reading it and I’m like, ‘Oh I guess my car was attacked by a turkey,’” Mastroianni explained.
In disbelief, Mastroianni said she got out of her car to assess the damage.
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