
Photographer Michael Winsor saw first-hand one effect of cosmetic wickedness while holding cinema of birds during Quidi Vidi Lake on Monday.
Winsor, a seasoned wildlife and landscape photographer, has witnessed his share of Newfoundland’s beauty in his travels throughout the island over new years. But he hadn’t seen anything like what he saw Monday, when he speckled a seagull flying, boring a cosmetic bag with it.
“It was drifting adult across. [The bag] was roughly behaving like a parachute as he was flying. In a design we can see a seagull. and a big, black bag was usually kind of pulling behind,” Winsor said.
Winsor pronounced he done his approach to a conflicting side of a lake to try to giveaway a seagull. Its original predicament was caused by people but as Winsor got closer to a gull, he saw presence of a fittest holding over.

The seagull was visibly struggling with a bag, that was wrapped firmly around a foot, and Winsor wasn’t a usually one who had noticed: a youthful bald eagle shortly swooped in, presumably looking for an easy lunch. Winsor gave follow as a span of birds fought their approach to a reduce finish of a lake.
“When we got down there we got out of a lorry during a right time, we guess, and a bald eagle indeed had a talons right into a seagull. we figured it was over during that point,” he said.
“But a mocking thing is when [the gull] strike a water, a bag indeed filled adult with water. It kind of saved him in a long-run, since a bald eagle couldn’t lift the seagull and a bag full of water.”

The birds struggled for a few moments, until a seagull was means to giveaway itself from both a captors, Winsor said. The bag itself remained floating in a lake, an environmental butt trap for another day.
“It’s going to be there for years, so it’s kind of unfortunate,” Winsor said. “This is a form of things that happens that we don’t see.”

While he was happy to see a seagull mangle divided for another day, Winsor pronounced he mostly comes upon trash in a province’s woods and hiking trails.
“It’s hapless we always see these small spots where people don’t take their trash,” he said.
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Article source: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/newfoundland-labrador/seagull-eagle-plastic-bag-1.5476337?cmp=rss