logo
3 years after B.C. village's resident peacocks disappeared, new sightings have locals talking

3 years after B.C. village's resident peacocks disappeared, new sightings have locals talking

CBC05-03-2025

Social Sharing
The reported sighting of two young peacocks in Naramata, B.C., has residents buzzing about the possible return of the exotic birds to the Okanagan community, which has a storied history with the colourful creatures.
For decades, peacocks roamed freely in the village on the shores of Okanagan Lake, 20 kilometres north of Penticton, capturing the attention of locals and visitors alike. But in 2022, the last two resident peacocks disappeared, believed to have been killed by bobcats, marking the end of the birds in the community.
Now, a photo of what appears to be one of two young male peacocks spotted near Naramata's downtown area has sparked excitement and curiosity among residents, reigniting conversations about the birds' place within the community—and the mystery of how they arrived back in the village.
"There's lots of excitement," said longtime resident and musician Yanti Sharples, who first saw the news on a community Facebook group.
"They were dropped somewhere downtown. They're roaming around, checking out the place, seeing if they want to hang out."
Resident Jordie Graham posted a photo on the page of a peacock perching on a utility line. Graham told CBC News his son had taken the picture and spotted a second bird as well.
Dozens of people have commented on the post about the peacock sighting, many expressing delight about the possible return of birds to the community.
For at least 20 years, up until early 2022, a group of peafowl roamed freely in Naramata. A peahen that bore chicks each year increased the numbers, according to Sharples. Around 2010, someone removed the peahen and her chicks from the village, leaving three adult male birds in the village.
Their loud, distinctive squawk could be heard throughout the town, and the birds delighted residents and visitors with their colourful fan tails, on full display.
Not everyone was happy about living with roaming peacocks, according to Sharples, who remembers the birds perching on parked cars, sometimes scratching the paint, and chasing after the municipal garbage truck every Thursday as it made its weekly route through town.
"There are two sides of the argument. Some people love them. Some people don't," Sharples said.
"They can be a menace, they really can. But they are also beautiful and amazing and made themselves known in the village. They would come out."
Residents affectionately named the birds, but in January 2022, the last two peacocks, known to many as Kevin and Peter, disappeared. It's believed the peacocks were killed off by wild bobcats.
Sharples remembers that as a sad time for the community, during the height of the pandemic with public health orders restricting people from gathering.
She composed a spoken word piece and invited her neighbour to contribute to the piece with their photos of the peacocks.
But now, after a three-year void of peacock-squawking, Sharples and others in Naramata are hoping the birds spotted in town will stay.
"I mean, always, they spark art and creativeness. There's lots of murals and artwork and photographs," she said.
The sighting also begs the question of how the peacocks arrived.
"That's the big question mark with back then and now. Who is bringing these peacocks to the village?" She asked.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Search for century-old artifact from Canadian shipwreck solved with a call from the U.S.

time5 hours ago

Search for century-old artifact from Canadian shipwreck solved with a call from the U.S.

David Saint-Pierre says he had little information to go on in his effort to hunt down the keeper of a 111-year-old artifact from the shipwrecked Empress of Ireland. He had a photo of a man in a diving suit, an address from 1975 and a name: Ronald Stopani. Saint-Pierre — a maritime historian who has studied artifacts recovered from the site of the 1914 shipwreck off the coast of Rimouski, Que. — treated it like a modern-day scavenger hunt. He was looking for the Marconi wireless apparatus, the communication system used to receive and send wireless telegraphs on the ship before it sank, claiming the lives of more than 1,000 people. The system included a tuner, work table and keys to send messages. Saint-Pierre and staff at the Empress of Ireland Museum in Rimouski discovered it was found and recovered during an expedition to the site 51 years ago by a diving crew from Rochester, N.Y. With Saint-Pierre's help, the museum found Stopani — a member of the diving crew who first pulled it up from the water in the 70s — and in the spring, the apparatus was sent back to Quebec. 'I didn't even know if that man was still alive' The process of finding Stopani involved dozens of emails, Facebook messages, a handful of phone calls and physical letters, says Saint-Pierre. I didn't even know if that man was still alive, said Saint-Pierre. It was a shot in the dark. The Empress of Ireland is shown in an undated photo. The Canadian Pacific steamship collided with a Norwegian freighter near Quebec on May 29, 1914, sinking in 14 minutes and killing 1,012 people. (Site historique maritime de la Pointe-au-Père) Photo: (Site historique maritime de la Pointe-au-Père) He says he wrote to probably anyone with the last name Stopani on Facebook for a few weeks. If your name is Stopani, you probably have one of my messages in your junk box, joked Saint-Pierre. One day in January, he got a call back. In an interview with CBC News, Stopani said he still had the apparatus stored in a clear storage box in his home in Las Vegas — and he was eager to donate it. As soon as I opened up the letter, it even had a picture of me in there so I knew exactly what it was, said Stopani, reached in Las Vegas. I wanted to donate them for a while, but I had no way of contacting anybody. The 81-year-old, who splits his time between his homes in Florida and Nevada, says he half expected to be contacted. Years earlier, the family of his best friend, Fred Zeller — who had led diving expeditions to the shipwreck and who recently passed away — told Stopani that they travelled to the Rimouski museum to donate artifacts Zeller found and documents from over the years. Included in the donation was the photo of Stopani with the Marconi and correspondence between him and Zeller from the mid-1970s — when the pair met up to dive the shipwreck together. It was that photo and letter which first inspired Saint-Pierre and museum staff to find Stopani — and the pictured artifacts. Five decades later, Stopani still remembers the day he pulled the items up from the floor of the St. Lawrence River — decades before it was prohibited to recover artifacts. Believe me, it was cold, he said, adding that during the dive in July, he could see small pieces of ice floating in the river. He recalled inflating his dry suit to float up to the surface with a bag that he says weighed about 30 kilograms. For the next 51 years, the artifact was well-travelled as he brought it with him on his moves from Rochester to Brampton, Ont., to Florida and finally Las Vegas. Having shipped the Marconi out a few months ago, he says sending it back to Quebec made him feel elated. Artifact to be sent for restoration work Roxane Julien-Friolet, a museologist, says the Marconi arrived at the museum in mid-March and in great condition. We're just amazed and really honoured to have this really important object part of our collection now, said Julien-Friolet. She says it will be sent for restoration work and then displayed. Operated by telegraphist Ronald Ferguson, this device was a very useful tool, she says, and part of the reason some were saved from the wreck in 1914 after an SOS message was sent. Saint-Pierre says laying eyes on the device gives historians even more information as to what happened on board. In a photo, Saint-Pierre's friend noticed the switch on the tuner was turned off. It means that … [Ferguson] had to abandon his post [but] he took the time to turn the machine off, said Saint-Pierre. Which was standard protocol. So really a professional man. Ferguson was one of the 465 survivors of the wreck and lived until the 1980s, he says. Saint-Pierre has since connected with Ferguson's son, who lives in the U.K., and informed him that his father's instrument was finally found. That was also a great moment for me to be able to tell [him], said Saint-Pierre. Knowing that it was still in existence and that it would be in the museum was really emotional for him. Rachel Watts (new window) · CBC News

Boa constrictor Bailey, reported missing at B.C. beach, turns up in owner's kayak
Boa constrictor Bailey, reported missing at B.C. beach, turns up in owner's kayak

CTV News

time2 days ago

  • CTV News

Boa constrictor Bailey, reported missing at B.C. beach, turns up in owner's kayak

This photo posted to Facebook by the Coastal Animal Rescue & Education Network shows Bailey, a boa constrictor that briefly went missing. (Credit: Facebook//coastalanimalrescue) Bailey the boa constrictor has turned up safe in its owner's kayak after being reported missing at a beach in Tofino, B.C., this week. James Rodgers, co-founder of the Coastal Animal Rescue and Education Network, says the owner who reported the six-foot reptile missing on Sunday found it on Wednesday. Rodgers says it's likely the snake slipped into the kayak, which its owner also brought to a beach, on the day it was thought to have gone missing. He says it is not clear how someone could miss a six-foot-long snake inside a kayak. The network says in a social media post that Bailey had been 'snoozing' in the kayak. It says the snake is 13 years old and 'a little small' for its age. This report by Wolfgang Depner, The Canadian Press, was first published June 13, 2025.

Black bear found soaking in Florida hot tub captured with doughnuts
Black bear found soaking in Florida hot tub captured with doughnuts

Toronto Sun

time2 days ago

  • Toronto Sun

Black bear found soaking in Florida hot tub captured with doughnuts

A black bear was seen soaking in a hot tub before Florida wildlife officials captured it a day later using doughnuts. Photo by Justin Roburt / Facebook Officials in Florida used doughnuts to capture a black bear after the animal was found soaking in a neighbour's hot tub. The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said they were contacted by police in Punta Gorda Isles after a landscaper reported a bear wandering around an upscale neighbourhood at around 9:30 a.m. on June 8. By the time wildlife officials, police officers and a bear management biologist arrived at the scene, the uninvited guest found its way into a neighbour's backyard and relaxed inside a hot tub. 'He's not looking for any trouble, that's for sure,' a local resident told NBC affiliate WBBH. 'He's just trying to find somewhere to live.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account Homeowner Lynn Martin recorded the bear removing cushions from the outdoor furniture. 'He just took the pillows off of the couch and was getting ready to take a nap,' Martin told CBS affiliate WINK. The bear wound up taking a nearly six-hour siesta under a shaded patio. Wildlife officials placed a trap on the property and used gentle hazing techniques to provoke it into leaving the area. RECOMMENDED VIDEO The bear eventually left the property and climbed a tree at a nearby vacant lot. A trap was then placed at the bottom of the tree as officials waited for it to return to the ground. The bear climbed down a day later and into the trap filled with sweet doughnut treats, Fox affiliate WSVN reported. Officials said the bear was caught and transported to a nearby state park. Read More Sports Sunshine Girls Relationships Editorial Cartoons Relationships

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store