Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Birders Flock To Vancouver For Glimpse Of Tanager That Migrated The Wrong Way

The Canadian Press, 12 Dec, 2017 02:07 PM
    VANCOUVER — Bird watchers are flocking to British Columbia's Lower Mainland after a wayward summer tanager was spotted pecking at peanuts on a south Vancouver balcony over the weekend.
     
    Saturday's sighting was the first time a summer tanager has been recorded in the Metro Vancouver area, and only the sixth time for all B.C., said Melissa Hafting, who runs a rare bird blog.
     
    "He's bringing a lot of joy to birders in the area," Hafting said in an email. "He has a small bill deformity but is eating very well."
     
    Summer tanagers typically winter from central Mexico to Bolivia and Brazil, and their summers are usually spent around the southeastern United States.
     
    The juvenile male is likely off course thanks to reverse migration, a phenomenon where young birds migrate in the opposite direction thanks to what is believed to be faulty genetic programming, Hafting said.
     
    The rare sight has attracted birders from as far away as Vancouver Island, Kelowna and Washington state, she added.
     
    Photographs of the Vancouver visitor show a medium-sized songbird with brilliant yellow feathers and splashes of bright red around its face. The top section of its thick, stubby bill curves slightly to the left.
     
    Wendy Kahle spotted the bird flitting about her balcony Saturday morning but didn't immediately recognize it.
     
    She said she posted a photo online asking for help identifying the species and within three minutes Hafting called her "super excited" to ask for permission to share the location with the birding community.
     
    "I said, 'Yes, sure. Come on down.' I had absolutely no idea how rare it was and just how much excitement it brought with it," Kahle said.
     
    Since then, between five and 10 people have been outside her home at any given time admiring the tanager, she added.
     
    "Everyone whom I spoke to was just thrilled and so thankful."
     
    Liron Gertsman, 17, was among the first to show up and photograph the tanager.
     
    "It was eating peanuts that the lady who found it had put out on her balcony," said the avid birder, who plans to study ornithology after he finishes high school. "It was even catching some insects. We watched it eat a couple wasps as well."
     
    He described the bird as stunning and said the sighting is likely a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
     
    "It makes you feel really small in a way because this bird is in totally the wrong part of its range," Gertsman said. "It makes it a really special thing to see a bird that is so rare in this part of the world."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Recognize This Car? Vancouver Police Think It Was Used In Drive-By Shooting

    Recognize This Car? Vancouver Police Think It Was Used In Drive-By Shooting
    The VPD is asking the public for information about a stolen silver Honda Civic, likely used in a drive-by shooting on August 29th.

    Recognize This Car? Vancouver Police Think It Was Used In Drive-By Shooting

    Sex Offender Missing From Halfway House Third Time In 10 Months

    Sex Offender Missing From Halfway House Third Time In 10 Months
    Christopher Schafer, 40, Is Wanted On A Canada-wide Warrant For Being Unlawfully At Large

    Sex Offender Missing From Halfway House Third Time In 10 Months

    Meet GURRATAN SINGH, NDP Leader JAGMEET SINGH's Brother And Regular Reality Check

    Meet GURRATAN SINGH, NDP Leader JAGMEET SINGH's Brother And Regular Reality Check
    "He's always like, 'Jagmeet, are you digging into that positivity?'" Singh said this week during an interview, Gurratan at his side, at NDP headquarters in Ottawa.

    Meet GURRATAN SINGH, NDP Leader JAGMEET SINGH's Brother And Regular Reality Check

    Only One In 10 Substantiated Sex Assaults Result In Conviction, StatsCan Says

    Only One In 10 Substantiated Sex Assaults Result In Conviction, StatsCan Says
    New research from Statistics Canada suggests one in 10 sexual assaults that are substantiated by police result in a criminal conviction.

    Only One In 10 Substantiated Sex Assaults Result In Conviction, StatsCan Says

    Ontario, B.C. Mull Pre-Construction Condo Sales Registry Amid CRA Crackdown

    Ontario, B.C. Mull Pre-Construction Condo Sales Registry Amid CRA Crackdown
    Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa says the government wants the CRA to enforce disclosure of so-called assignment sales or shadow flipping, where a buyer purchases a condo from a developer and sells it to another buyer before it is completed

    Ontario, B.C. Mull Pre-Construction Condo Sales Registry Amid CRA Crackdown

    Police Bring In Specialists To Help Search B.C. Property Where Remains Found

    Police Bring In Specialists To Help Search B.C. Property Where Remains Found
    SALMON ARM , B.C. — The Mounties are bringing in specialists to help search a rural property in Salmon Arm, B.C., where they say human remains have been found.

    Police Bring In Specialists To Help Search B.C. Property Where Remains Found