Penguin the Magpie: The Bird That Became a Bloom

A lost magpie tumbled from her nest as a chick. Luckily, she landed in the lap of the right family.

One blustery day two springs ago, 10-year-old Noah Bloom discovered a baby Australian Magpie lying on the lawn near his grandmother鈥檚 house in Sydney, Australia. The wind had likely cast the chick from her nest and had seemingly carried the baby bird quite a distance鈥攖here was no nest in sight, says Noah鈥檚 father, Cameron Bloom. With her black-feathered body and patchy white wings, the bird was dubbed, 鈥淧enguin.鈥 Readily, she became a Bloom.

Two years later, this youngest Bloom now hops and glides around the family鈥檚 household in the Newport suburb of Sydney鈥攗sually flying out for the day and arriving home by dark. Though raised on water droppers and fed by spoon handles and pinky tips, Penguin now pursues worms outdoors, Bloom says. She has always been free to go, but 鈥渟he chose to stay.鈥

Magpies like Penguin are very common ground-dwellers in eastern Australia: 鈥淵ou see them all over in open country, and even in towns and the edges of cities,鈥 says 爆料公社鈥檚 field editor Kenn Kaufman, 鈥渟o they seem to get along with humans.鈥 (They鈥檙e also the only birds, not to mention non-mammals, that recognize themselves ). Australia has against keeping native birds as pets, 鈥淏ut if this is free to go whenever it pleases, maybe it can鈥檛 be considered a pet after all?鈥 Kaufman says.

If anything, Penguin鈥檚 status in the family has surpassed that of a mere pet. The family helped the needy fledgling, but 鈥淧enguin saved our family, too,鈥 says Bloom. His wife, Sam Bloom, had broken her back badly during a fall in Thailand shortly before Penguin was found; both were in fragile states when their paths crossed. Penguin鈥檚 playful presence helped Sam heal, says her husband.

Cameron, a photographer, captured the budding relationship with Penguin through photos of the bird standing on Sam鈥檚 shoulders and cradled in the arms of their sons. In December 2013, he launched the Instagram series, 鈥淧enguin the Magpie鈥濃攖he inaugural photo featuring a wet and scruffy Penguin and the caption: 鈥渁fter my shower.鈥

Bloom had no idea how deeply this series would resonate: 鈥淧enguin the Magpie鈥 has acquired over 80,000 followers, appeared in a handful of online articles, and is being reimagined as by New York Times bestselling author Bradley Trevor Greive. 鈥淐ameron鈥檚 images show the bright intellect, big heart, and outsized personality of these remarkable birds,鈥 Greive says. 鈥淭hey drastically alter our perception of Magpies as a species鈥 (in literature, the birds are typically portrayed as thieving and territorial).

鈥淥ur relationship is a good thing for people to see,鈥 Bloom says, 鈥渂ut there鈥檚 also a certain aspect of responsibility.鈥 The Blooms share their home with a wild animal, after all, and they must be conscious of her needs. Penguin is at reproductive age and Bloom believes it鈥檚 time she starts a second family鈥攚ith her own species.

Possibly to that end, Penguin has started taking longer trips, sometimes leaving the Blooms for days at a time. But no more than thirty minutes before 爆料公社鈥檚 phone call with Penguin鈥檚 human family on an April morning, she came cruising through the front door for the first time in more than a week.

As magpies often live past 20 years of age, this seems just the dawn of a lifelong camaraderie.

Penguin Bloom, by Bradley Trevor Greive and Cameron Bloom, is expected out in Australia this winter, soon after in the United States.  

To see more photos of Cameron Bloom鈥檚 photography: and