Published Monday, April 15, 2013 7:28PM EDT
Its victim was an unsuspecting pigeon in one of the city's
most densely populated neighbourhoods.
The gyrfalcon, which escaped from its owner last
September, was spotted on an apartment balcony clutching the freshly caught
pigeon in its talons.
Feathers flew as the falcon moved about the porch with its
kill before it swooped away above the Plateau-Mont-Royal district. The
predatory bird belongs to the world's largest falcon species.
Its owner, who identified the bird from photos, said he's
been trying to find the falcon since it bolted during a training exercise in
the western Quebec town of Hudson last fall.
The female, bracelet-wearing bird was only about four
months old when it flew the coop and Carl Millier hadn't even given it a name.
Millier was saddened by the loss and is pleased to see his
falcon appeared to be alive and well.
"Whenever you spend time with a bird and you lose it,
for sure (you're sad)," Millier said in an interview.
"I tried for about a week to find the bird in my
area."
But catching the falcon is far from a lock for Millier,
who figures he has only a slim chance of actually getting it back.
The falcon, he said, was photographed last Wednesday around
250 kilometres from Montreal in Quebec City . The identification number on the
bracelet was visible in one high-resolution photo.
Millier, who had begun training the gyrfalcon for the
sport of falconry, also runs a business that uses predatory birds to patrol
airports. The goal is to keep other birds from flying into airplane engines.
In falconry, trained gyrfalcons are used by expert
handlers to hunt game birds, often in eye-popping fashion as they dive-bomb
their prey from great heights.
A bird of prey identified by a local bird expert as a gyrfalcon |
"Due to its size, its hunts are quite
spectacular," said Millier, noting his wayward, three-pound bird is
particularly imposing for a gyrfalcon.
"That's enormous."
A McGill
University wildlife
expert said gyrfalcons have been coveted for centuries for their falconry abilities,
characteristics that made them popular with kings and emperors.
"The gyrfalcons are the largest and most powerful of
all the falcons," David Bird said.
"That's the Lamborghini of raptors."
While a few pairs of peregrine falcons are known to nest in
Montreal , Bird
said gyrfalcon sightings are very rare in the city because they usually live in
Arctic regions.
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