Bird watchers flock to see gull
Published 9:00 pm Friday, November 24, 2006
CALIPATRIA, Calif. – A small white gull with an ordinary name had bird watchers flocking to the Salton Sea for what they call a “mega-rarity.”
The Salton Sea, a 35-mile-long lake stretching across the Imperial and Riverside county line, is a popular stop for birds heading south, and Guy McCaskie, co-author of “Birds of Salton Sea,” believed he spotted a Ross’ gull there a week ago.
The appearance of the arctic bird nearly 100 miles east of San Diego would be the first reported in California and would place it hundreds of miles farther south than it had ever been seen.
The gull, which normally breeds in Siberia or Greenland, rarely appears south of Alaska.
“It was a really fancy bird,” McCaskie said.
Bird watchers have been racing to the Salton Sea.
“We thought it was worth a 10-hour drive, even knowing we might not see the bird,” San Francisco ornithologist Scott Terrill said. “It’s a really good bird.”
