Birders aflutter after sightings of rare falcon in St. John's
White morph gyrfalcon and a grey morph shared a meal of fresh gull carcass
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A ghostly white figure caused a stir on Quidi Vidi Lake in St. John's Wednesday.
A white morph gyrfalcon joined a grey morph to dine on a fresh Iceland gull.
"To see two plumages of that bird that close is quite exciting for a photographer like myself," said Clyde Thornhill, who managed to snap a few shots of the birds.
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Thornhill said he was just one of about twelve birders summoned down to the lake by a flurry of excited text messages from a fellow birder.
The gyrfalcon is the world's largest falcon, according to the Audubon Guide to North American Birds, and the white morph is particularly uncommon.
- Rare white gyrfalcon spotted in Eel River Bar area
- Rarely seen white morph gyrfalcon spotted in New Brunswick
Thornhill said that even when the falcons do head south for Canada, birders rarely get to see much of them.
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"They're fast-flying birds, you only get a glimpse of them."
Thornhill was out by the lake again on Thursday morning to see if the birds were out hunting for another meal.