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Rare white magpie thrills man in Wales: ‘Wow, what a thing that was’

A rare white magpie recently discovered in Wales is “beyond anything we could have imagined”, a bird lover recently exclaimed.

Terry Wright, 52, spotted the bird on Saturday (March 9) in the coastal town of Fishguard in Pembrokeshire, Wales, according to British news agency SWNS.

Mr Wright said the white magpie is such a rare bird that the chance of encountering one is about one in a million.

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The same source said the magpie’s white color could be due to a disease called leukism, a genetic mutation that reduces the color of a bird’s plumage in whole or in part.

Wright said after several failed attempts to photograph the bird, he managed to capture a few images.

The white magpie was spotted by a man in Fishguard, Pembrokeshire, Wales on March 9th. When Terry Wright, 52, saw the rare bird, he said: “He was beyond anything I could have imagined.” (SWNS)

He said they were “beyond his imagination.”

He told other news outlets that the white magpie was with three other black and white magpies, but when the four took off together, the other birds accepted their “other feathered friends”. He said it seems like it.

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Mr Wright, from Abasich, Pembrokeshire, said of the magpie: “I’ve never seen one before”.

He said he feels “blessed” to be able to photograph rare creatures.

He said the chances of seeing such a white bird are 1 in 30,000, but the chance of seeing a white magpie is 1 in a million…that’s more than I ever imagined seeing. [taken] “There has never been a photo like this before,” he added.

“Even when I’m talking about it, I have a smile on my face because I think it was amazing,” Wright said.

white magpie

The white magpie was discovered by an amateur photographer in Wales this month. The rare white magpie is said to suffer from a condition called leucism, a genetic mutation that reduces the color of the bird’s plumage in whole or in part. (SWNS)

Wright oversees a Facebook page called Meander.

There, he posts daily photos of nature to his nearly 6,000 followers.

He also says there, “Travel with me through my images. I’m a photographer and nature lover. I put the two together to know that I was lucky. All you have to do is look.”

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A wildlife enthusiast, he said he feels “blessed” to be able to photograph the white bird.

Wright said, “For someone. [who is] In nature, it’s just the best thing ever…I feel blessed to be able to see it and photograph it. ”

A Perth man who stumbled across the rare white bird while at work in July last year was thrilled by the “strangely colored magpie.”

The Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s All About Birds site describes the black-billed magpie as “a sociable, inquisitive bird that feeds on fruits, grains, insects, and small animals, and often lives in large flocks on carrion.” It is written as follows.

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These birds “live in flocks,” the New York-based group further states, “and emit a variety of calls, including trills, cackles, and whistles. During flight, they flap their wings steadily, making deep flaps and It negotiates sudden changes in direction by alternating shallow flaps and using its very long tail. ”

Stories about rare and strangely colored birds often go viral.

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“You don’t always get to see things like that,” one man said of another rare bird discovered in the wild last year. Shown here, from left to right, is a toucan, a young tawny owl, and a male cardinal. (François Nel/Getty; Matt Cardy/Getty; Wolfgang Köhler/Getty)

According to Yahoo, a Perth man who stumbled upon a rare white bird at work in July last year was thrilled by the “strangely colored magpie.”

The man took a photo of the magpie and shared it on Facebook, where it went viral.

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Yahoo reported in July 2023 that more than 5,000 people had reacted to the image, with hundreds more posting comments expressing their joy.

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“It made my week… You don’t always get to see things like this,” the man told Yahoo News Australia.

For more lifestyle articles, visit www.foxnews.com/lifestyle.

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