'Little turkey, big city': The rise and fall of NDG's streetwise fowl - Action News
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Montreal

'Little turkey, big city': The rise and fall of NDG's streetwise fowl

Butters joins Kveune, another wild turkey, and Humperdink the humpback whale in Montreal's pandemic pantheon of fallen fauna.

Wild bird was 'like a little ray of hope,' one mourner said

turkey
Butters was frequently spotted in neighbourhoods like Notre-Dame-de-Grce, Montreal West and Cte St-Luc, spawned a Facebook fan page with hundreds of followers. (Submitted by Aurlie Frenette-Araujo)

The incongruity of a wild animal in the thick of the urban jungle can bring delight and surprise at any time; all the more soduring a pandemic.

The most recent Montreal example is Butters, a wild turkey that took up residence west of downtown and was the subject of sightings in neighbourhoods like Notre-Dame-de-Grce, Montreal West and Cte Sait-Luc.

Butters' rise to fame was meteoric. The birdspawned a Facebook fan page that attractedhundreds of followers in a few weeks and, like a celebrity grabbing a burger in Hollywood, generated a torrent of social media posts whenever he appeared in public.

"It was pretty fun, trying to find it each day with my parents," said Jeremy Biskin, an avid participant of the Facebook page. "Kind of like hide-and-seek, Turkey Edition."

Butters was a little ray of hope in the community, said Aurlie Frenette-Araujo, whose first sighting of the turkey was last December."He just brought a smile to everybody's face. Even now, people are still talking about him."

Frenette-Araujo said "even now" because Butters, sadly, met his demise at a busy intersection a few days ago.

A witness describedButters' death in a post on his fan page. Police had been trying to keep the turkey away from the intersection of Westminster Avenue andCte-Saint-Luc Road.

The driver of the car that struck the birdwas, reportedly, himself a Butters fan.

"My heart is broken," said one of the 130 comments on the post. "I'm not OK," wrote another.

Butters is shown here in better days with a friend in a Montreal front yard. (Submitted by Aurlie Frenette-Araujo)

The witness wrote that the driver was distraught about the accident.

"I mean what can you do?" asked Frenette-Araujo, a master's student at McGill who lives in NDG.

"Little turkey, big city. Like, there's only so much we could do to try to protect him. And I think we tried our best and it was an accident."

Followed path of many a young suburbanite

Alongside Butters in the MontrealPantheon of Pandemic Fauna isKveune, a wild turkey that united Verdun residents during the pandemic's first wave last spring.

There is also the latehumpback whale that drew hundreds to the Old Port last last spring after veering far from its natural habitat and swimming up the St. Lawrence River.

Why that whale which was shockinglynever given a nickname (Humperdink?) travelled to Montreal remains a mystery. So does the exact cause of its death, thoughscientists believe it could be due to "prolonged exposure to soft waters."

Whale sightings are exceedingly rare, but Barbara Frei, a wildlife biologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada said there may yet moreKveunesand Butters.

Frei said the wild turkey population is growing, a dynamic that results in young birds being "driven out to find their own place in the world."

As Montreal's suburbs expand into more natural areas, a green corridor is created, allowing the birds to make their way into the city.

"As we continue to take up their habitat, and move into the natural areas, this wildlife interaction is just something we're going to have to find a harmonious way of dealing with," Freisaid.

With files from Valeria Cori-Manocchio