Brown Pelican Blown Off Course to Strip Club in Canada Is Coming Home


Ralph, a brown pelican, has spent six months in Canada. Photo: The Chronicle Herald/Mark Goudge

It wasn鈥檛 Ralph鈥檚 fault that he ended up at the strip club. The storm made him do it. Last September Hurricane Earl swept a young to Nova Scotia, where he landed at Ralph鈥檚 Club, a strip joint that he was subsequently named for. Now, after months of Canadian hospitality, Ralph is heading home.

Ralph has spent half a year at the rehabilitation center, where Hope Swinemar has been caring for him. He hasn鈥檛 been sent home sooner because of red tape.

He can鈥檛 be flown across the border on a commercial plane unless he鈥檚 been cleared in advance for entry into the U.S., staff member Allison Dube told . 鈥淭here is no local U.S. Fish and Wildlife office in Halifax to do that.鈥 

Instead the group was hoping someone might offer the pelican a spot on a private plane. But Halifax businessman Garry Soweby had a different idea: Drive the bird in an eco-friendly van.

"That鈥檚 a lot of money for anybody and that鈥檚 a big carbon footprint to get a little bird down south," he told The Chronicle Herald. "I thought, 鈥楪ee, if we could do it with an ethanol-powered vehicle, it would be almost the same as him flying down there himself, in terms of the carbon footprint.鈥 "

The distance of the 1,200-mile drive to a North Carolina wildlife sanctuary doesn鈥檛 ruffle Soweby, who has driven around the world and holds several long-distance driving records, according to . But having a pelican passenger might make for a rather stinky adventure, he says. "It鈥檒l be a bit of a smelly drive, but I think I can deal with that. He鈥檚 eating fish all day and he鈥檚 gotta let it out somewhere." 

Swinemar, who runs the Hope for Wildlife Society, will also come along. They plan to leave March 7. Ralph will ride in a cage, stocked with plenty of food and water. Once they drop him off, he鈥檒l spend the winter with two other brown pelicans at the rehabilitation center before being released in the spring, CBCNews Canada reports.

While it鈥檚 shaping up to be a happy ending for Ralph, his feathered brethren still face numerous threats鈥攁s the globe warms being just one of them. Brown pelicans鈥攚hich just came off the Endangered Species List in November 2009鈥攚ere the avian species by the disastrous , second only to laughing gulls.

Though the oil spill has largely faded from the news, there is still much recovery work to be done. You can help by contacting your senators and asking them to designate penalties鈥攑aid for by BP鈥攆or Gulf recovery and restoration that will help birds, wildlife, and habitat in the region.

You don鈥檛 have to be a long-distance driver to help pelicans. to send a letter. 


Red banded juvenile Brown Pelican 4Z2, oiled by BP Deepwater Horizon oil disaster, rehabilitated and released on Rabbit Island, West Cove, Louisiana. Photo: Kim Hubbard/爆料公社 magazine