A photography hobbyist on vacation from Vancouver, Washington, in Hug Point, Oregon, with his new camera, captures something so unique that it makes headlines and eventually becomes a star.
Michael Sanchez took some photos of birds flying nearby. It’s all normal and a little unusual to the point of shaking.
A high school brand director became a star a week later in 1997 because he didn’t know he had bumped into a bird native to East Asia that had only been seen once in North America.
The bird was a rare blue heron that was spotted that day by the American Bird Association.
“I was surprised to see how excited people were,” Sanchez said.
Sanchez never considered himself a birder, but he was amazed to see a beautiful bird he had never seen before.
“So I guess I should post it on social media, right?” Then someone who knew about the bird reached him.
It has been identified as a male blue stone shot from blue plums and typical chestnut.
According to The Guardian, another blue coral was eaten four days later in the Farallon Islands off the coast of San Francisco. There is a meeting in January.