From Julie Maggert

Sometimes, opportunities only come once in a lifetime. Well, I ended up having 4 with this Snowy. I couldn’t help myself and head over one more time. I hemd and hawd all morning about what my chances were going to be to get any better shots of her. You can not rely on nature. She does her own thing when she wants. I had more driving around this time. She made me work for it. She finally perched onto a utility pole early enough with bright, blue skies. I couldn’t be more proud of myself throughout this whole journey. It took a lot of work, time, and stubbornness. Again, she is REAL, no AI, nor color enhancing.

  • I should think getting blasted by a spray painter would be pretty stressful!

    When it was first reported, there were two comments I thought significant. The first was that the coloring matched pretty well what would have been exposed had she been roosting - it wasn’t consistent on the feathers, but mostly the edges.

    Second, didn’t someone say the state confirmed that it looks like the dye they put in the washing solution for under-bridges? Something like that.

    • anon6789@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 day ago

      I do recall a rust inhibitor comment, but I haven’t heard any “oh yeah we did first a bridge with orange stuff around that time.”. Also heard some theories about aviation deicer, but again, nothing after the original statement.

      I would think there could only be so many things that could dye a bird for over a month that are orange, and the people using it would say, “hey that must be this!”

      • We’ll know after she molts. I can believe any “temporary” dye could be effectively permanent on something as porous as feathers.

        It’s clearly not paint, though, and with any luck not toxic for her when she preens.

        I will say, it certainly made her striking!