Crowds gather to watch the pelican that flew in to Cornwall
by Stephen Moss from Environment | The Guardian on (#22BPN)
The only wild pelican to be seen in Britain in modern times has been attracting birders to Cornwall all summer. But pelicans were here 2000 years ago. Might they return?
It flew in like a seaplane, scattering a flotilla of what looked like small boats as it landed on the waters of the estuary. I blinked, and an avian image displaced this aeronautical one: for it wasn't an aircraft, but a bird.
A Dalmatian pelican (Pelicanus crispus), to be precise: named not because it has a black spotted plumage (it doesn't), but after the region of south-east Europe from which it hails. Having landed, it floated serenely amongst the gulls and little egrets, which appeared tiny by comparison with this huge and rather ungainly bird.
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