An unusual visitor arrived on the shores of Cape Point this week, when a king penguin waddled onto Buffels Bay beach taking visitors and park rangers by surprise.
This rare sighting happened on 30 October in the morning and has already garnered a lot of attention from local birders.
Buffelsbaai vagrant king penguin and admirers this afternoon – a flightless twitch at Cape Point, South Africa: pic.twitter.com/gQuKiLbikl
— Tim Dee (@TimDee4) October 30, 2019
SANParks announced on Facebook that the penguin has been assessed by SANCCOB and was declared to be in good health, with no medical concerns.
‘We urge the public to keep their distance from the penguin as his activity will be monitored over the next few days,’ they said.
Although penguins are not a strange sight in South Africa, king penguins are not endemic to the region and are found on sub-Antarctic islands. This means that this penguin made a roughly 2,000 km journey to sun itself on the Cape beach.
The king penguin is the second largest species of penguin in the world, after the emperor penguin.
This is not the first time a king penguin has swam up onto our shores. The last sighting was in 2017, when a bird washed up in Hout Bay. The penguin that had an injury possibly from a fishing hook, was in arrested moult and was no longer producing vital waterproof fathers. It was taken to SANCCOB for rehabilitation.
Image source: @wherethelight_is/Twitter