Culture Why Philly has so many chicken bones lying around - "[Foreman] is confident animals were behind the mess, [...] he has 'never seen' humans do anything of the sort."

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As the cold thaws and the snow melts, one constant remains the same: There are chicken bones on the Philly streets.

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Illustration of fried chicken. A reader asked Curious Philly why they saw so many chicken bones on Philly sidewalks.

Time may be a flat circle, but that doesn’t stop us from wondering why. A reader asked through Curious Philly, The Inquirer’s forum for answering questions, why there are so many chicken bones on the sidewalks and streets of Philadelphia.

Two architects appear to be behind Philadelphia’s chicken-bone temple.

First are animals, who forage through trash looking for the final scraps left on discarded bones. Whether they discover drumsticks by ripping through trash bags on the street or from dumpster diving, these animals likely drop the bones wherever they finish with them.

The culprits most likely to blame are rats, followed by raccoons and opossums, said Rich Foreman, the owner of Dynamite Pest Control in West Philly.

While it’s unclear if rats have a particular taste for fried chicken, the animals are among the least-picky eaters around and will take advantage of any food source, from human scraps to cannibalism. And Philadelphia is seemingly a good place to be a rat, being declared the eighth-rattiest city in the United States in 2025 by the pest-control company Orkin, measured by tracking its new residential rodent treatments.

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Adrian Jordan, Vector Control Crew Chief, works keeping the rat population under control, in Philadelphia, Friday, March 7, 2025.

Foreman sees the chicken-bone problem all over the city, as with some restaurants in Port Richmond that called Dynamite when they saw their trash all over the street. He is confident animals were behind the mess, and said he has “never seen” humans do anything of the sort.

Foreman said the city’s twice-weekly trash pickup initiative has not helped, since it means an additional day of easily accessible trash on the street for animals.

He said the best way for people to prevent critters from going into their garbage for bones is to get large, durable trash cans.

“And make sure you put the lid on it,” he said.

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Residents with trash arriving at garbage dump site at Caldera Road and Red Lion Road in northeast Philadelphia. AFSCME District Council 33 workers enter their second week on strike, Tuesday, July 8, 2025.

Scavenging animals was the conclusion that the Search Engine podcast reached in a 2024 episode investigating the cause of the chicken bones littering the streets of New York City. Other cities have reported the same problem, including Chicago, Miami, and Washington.

And yet, anecdotal evidence from residents demonstrates that human activity clearly contributes to the problem.

Jessica Griffith has become the David Attenborough of abandoned chicken bones, documenting and appreciating the beauty of what she encounters in the wild. More than 10 years ago, when she lived in South Philly, Griffith, 46, would notice the chicken bones frequently on walks with her dog. She started photographing them and posting the pictures to Facebook, finding the bones everywhere, including a pile on a SEPTA train.

“It was just bizarre to me. Just a phenomenon,” she said.

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Jessica Griffith snapped this picture of some discarded chicken bones on the Broad Street Line in 2013.

Her documentation gathered a following, and people started to send their own submissions. Griffith received pictures from all over the globe — people in Seattle, Las Vegas, South Korea, Sweden, and the Dominican Republic all had their own pictures of discarded chicken bones to share.

When Brian Love, 53, walks his miniature pinscher, Ziggy, through the Gayborhood, he often sees other people smiling at his dog. But then he realizes it’s because Ziggy is carrying a chicken bone in his mouth.

Love has complained to his friends about constantly needing to tussle with Ziggy over what the dog sees as a treasure. He has watched people toss chicken bones on the ground, and recently came across a pile of four bones on a mound of snow. Love wishes his neighbors would just use trash bins.

“It’s your food that you’ve literally just had in your mouth. Throw it in the trash,” he said.

Stephanie Harmelin, 43, has the same problem with her dog in West Philly, and she said she accepts the bony sidewalks as part of living in a city. She has seen aggressive squirrels rifling through trash, but also has come across bones at street corners and under park benches that appear to have been dropped by humans.

She said part of the problem is educational. Once, Harmelin pulled her dog away from a bone on the street, and two fellow walkers asked her why.

Harmelin explained how chicken bones are unsafe for most dogs to consume. Cooked bones splinter when a dog chews on them, and the sharp fragments may cause life-threatening damage as they pass through the dog’s digestive track.

One woman was shocked, and said she had not realized chicken bones were potentially dangerous to dogs when she had tossed them to the ground before.

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Theo Caraway of Philadelphia walking his dog Cooper, 6 months, Shitzu/Poodle wearing his Eagles jersey along Kensington at Ontario Street on Philadelphia, Friday, September 5, 2025.

Harmelin has had similar conversations with others who were not aware of the hazards bones create. Now, she is less likely to be frustrated at whomever has dropped the chicken bone on her street corner.

“We’re trying to assume what other people know and intend, but we can’t,” she said.

Even if more people get the message, though, it appears you will still be as likely to find a chicken bone on the street as a fallen leaf.

Although they’re a gross nuisance of a sidewalk adornment, Griffith doesn’t really mind them. She said they are more of a curiosity that make Philly what it is, in a small way.

“I think it’s kind of endearing,” she said.
 
The more I travel the more I realize how recent and spotty the "don't litter" idea is. Even large swaths of Europe are covered in litter (and not just the parts overrun with Muslims, this is endemic and they don't even clean the sewage before they dump it in the sea over there). The only actually clean areas are parts of the US and parts of a few Asian countries where they've made it a real priority. Everywhere else, people are some degree of disgusting about garbage, with India and Africa being significantly worse than the median.
Litter is non-existent in most of western europe (with the usual exceptions) for the obvious demographic reasons this article points out. The worst places are usually eastern european, aka poor europe. Go to any majority-white place in the U.K., Switzerland, Denmark, Germany, Austria, etc. and you will not see anything like what is described in this article anywhere.
 
Even large swaths of Europe are covered in litter (and not just the parts overrun with Muslims, this is endemic
It didn’t used to be like that. England was really very clean. Then they removed half the litter bins because of The Troubles (people let putting bombs in them) and then we got diversified. Now it’s filthy.
 
Jessica Griffith has become the David Attenborough of abandoned chicken bones, documenting and appreciating the beauty of what she encounters in the wild. More than 10 years ago, when she lived in South Philly, Griffith, 46, would notice the chicken bones frequently on walks with her dog. She started photographing them and posting the pictures to Facebook, finding the bones everywhere, including a pile on a SEPTA train.
OP should choke on a chicken bone for that sentence alone.
Harmelin has had similar conversations with others who were not aware of the hazards bones create. Now, she is less likely to be frustrated at whomever has dropped the chicken bone on her street corner.

“We’re trying to assume what other people know and intend, but we can’t,” she said.
The soft bigotry of low expectations.
Although they’re a gross nuisance of a sidewalk adornment, Griffith doesn’t really mind them. She said they are more of a curiosity that make Philly what it is, in a small way.

“I think it’s kind of endearing,” she said.
Remember that when you fail to stop your dog from eating one.
 
They name the exact cities where this happens, there are very obvious patterns amongst these cities, and YET, no one is brave enough to write down the obvious conclusion. Hey, at least you're not a bigot!
 
It didn’t used to be like that. England was really very clean. Then they removed half the litter bins because of The Troubles (people let putting bombs in them) and then we got diversified. Now it’s filthy.
Terrorists ruin everything they touch.
 
Litter is non-existent in most of western europe (with the usual exceptions) for the obvious demographic reasons this article points out. The worst places are usually eastern european, aka poor europe. Go to any majority-white place in the U.K., Switzerland, Denmark, Germany, Austria, etc. and you will not see anything like what is described in this article anywhere.

Spain is covered in litter. Just covered.
 
or someone who looked particularly ghetto either. He was wearing business casual clothing and it was evening rush hour in a nice-enough city area. He was obviously commuting home from work.
That is the thing about them It does not matter how wealthy they are or what their job status is. Ghetto culture is purely comes from their mind.
 
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