https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/09/nyregion/goldfish-sidewalk-pond-brooklyn.html

The great Brooklyn goldfish heist started, as many dubious plans do, at a bar in the early morning. Inside the Bad Luck Bar in Bedford-Stuyvesant on Thursday, Max David and Emily Campbell met and hatched a simple scheme:

Walk quickly but casually down the street.

Grab as many goldfish as you can.

Walk quickly away.

“Last night was super-smooth,” said Ms. Campbell, 29, who lives in the neighborhood and was racked by what she considered an act, however unintentional, of animal cruelty. In a concrete sidewalk pit fed by a leaking fire hydrant, someone had dumped scores of tiny goldfish. Ms. Campbell was certain that they were bound to die. She thought she had to do something, and so, armed with two small fishnets and two large Ziploc bags, she and Mr. David, 32, crept up on the pit.

“We gathered 25-plus fish,” she said.

The after-hours caper was the latest escalation in a neighborhood standoff that has spread far beyond its puddle of origin. It has led to at least one shouting match, days of hand-wringing on social media and concerns ranging from gentrification to basic human decency.

And there are still a bunch of goldfish in the pond.

Image

A dozen or so goldfish in a rocky sidewalk pool.
The goldfish of Bed-Stuy on Thursday.Credit…Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

It all started last week, when Jequan Irving and his friends noticed that a leaky hydrant was filling a gravel pit in the sidewalk with water, near the corner of Hancock Street and Tompkins Avenue. Mr. Irving has lived his entire life near this intersection, which he described as still struggling, despite the gentrification of recent years.

From the Daily News

A group of Brooklyn men created a makeshift goldfish pond in a puddle pooling under a leaky hydrant, delighting some locals, and concerning others who fear the fish will not survive.

Longtime Bedford-Stuyvesant resident Hajj-Malik Lovick, 47, said he and some friends were tired of looking at an often-leaking hydrant on Hancock St. near Tompkins Ave. — and decided to reinvent the inch-and-a-half-deep puddle below it into a community aquarium.

“It was like a condemned Johnny pump. Why not make it better than leaving things that look broken? Why not fix it?” Lovick said as he sat in a lawn chair guarding the pond.

Taylor Evans and her son Aston, 1, look at the pond on Hancock St. where some local residents added goldfish creating what they call “Hood Pond.”

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