The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Last Tango in Norboro

The colourful bird that gained national attention following 2015 escape dies on family property

- BY COLIN MACLEAN JOURNAL PIONEER

One of Prince County’s most colourful inhabitant­s has passed away.

Tango the peacock died in his cage sometime overnight Saturday.

He was eight years old. He is predecease­d by his cage-mates, Salsa and Flamenco.

Tango was part of the Cook family of Norboro, near Kensington.

He lived a simple life on his family’s property, that is, except for a brief stint of internatio­nal fame in 2015.

Between July and September of that year, Tango flew the coop and escaped into the wilds of P.E.I. with only his considerab­le wits to sustain him.

His family’s subsequent attempts to recapture him were the talk of eastern Prince County for weeks, garnering national media attention and gaining interest from the media in the United States as well.

“Everybody in (the) Facebook world all across to the West Coast heard about him,” said Kevin Cook, Tango’s owner.

Tango originally escaped during a photoshoot at Cook’s property, Honeytree Nursery.

When news of the escape hit P.E.I. media, Cook was inundated with sighting calls from one end of the Island to the other – and even one from New Brunswick.

Over the next several weeks, the family tried a series of progressiv­ely more technologi­cally savvy methods to catch him.

Tango would fall for none of it.

As if to mock his owners, the colourful avian would periodical­ly return home to snatch dog food from the mouths of traps meant to cage him or simply to sit on the roof of the house and survey his would-be masters.

“He knew better. There was just no way I could catch him around the house. So he was just living, running around the property, then he’d go back to the woods at night,” said Cook.

“It was very frustratin­g. I thought I was being outwitted by a bird. It felt like Wile E. Coyote and the Road Runner.”

By the end, Cook was spending evenings hanging out in his pickup truck, sipping a coffee with one hand and holding a trip rope attached to the door of a trap in his other hand. Periodical­ly he would play peacock noises from his phone’s speakers.

It was one such evening on the Blue Shank Road, following a tip of a sighting, when Cook’s coyote-esque perseveran­ce finally paid off.

He was just about to pack it in for the evening when Tango made an appearance and wandered far enough into the trap that Cook was able to trip the door shut and put the bird’s wandering days to rest.

Tango spent the next two years living on the Cook farm without incident, his time in the national spotlight at an end.

Cook isn’t sure why Tango died, though he suspects it may have been an undetected illness of some sort.

It’s a shame, he said Monday, as peacocks can live for more than 15 years, so Tango still had a long life ahead of him.

In any case, Tango will be missed.

He was laid to rest Sunday morning in a small grave beside the Cook family dog and two of their cats.

“He deserved that,” said Cook.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Tango the peacock, whose escape and recapture earned national media attention in 2015, passed away in Norboro on Saturday.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Tango the peacock, whose escape and recapture earned national media attention in 2015, passed away in Norboro on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada