Strangers rescue peacock from peril on Victoria street
After living in his downtown Victoria neighbourhood for more than 30 years, David Ferguson says this was a first.
"It’s like seeing a goldfish in a school of black fish," Ferguson says, pointing to where he noticed the peacock wandering along the busy street. "It’s like, what is this doing here?"
Meanwhile, Kirk Van Ludwig was working outside his Autonomous Furniture store when he noticed what seemed like the setup for a joke.
"Why did the peacock cross the road?" Van Ludwigsmiles.
At the same time, Logan Jacobsen was hanging Christmas lights before he started capturing the bold bird on camera.
"There’s a peacock running down the street!" Jacobsen laughs.
But the sense of surreal fun quickly turned to very real fear for the peacock’s safety.
"It was getting tumbled about by the big wheels of the truck," Ferguson says.
"Like any moment it was going to get smoked," Van Ludwig recalls with a wince.
"I didn’t want to see roadkill," Jacobsen says.
That’s when Jacobsen announced he was going to pluck the peacock from his potential peril.
"I said to him, 'Watch your face!'" Ferguson recalls. "I though that bird’s going to poke his eyes out or something."
What Ferguson and Van Ludwig didn’t know was that this was not Jacobsen's first rodeo.
"I grew up catching turkeys and chickens," Jacobsen smiles.
When little Jacobsen wasn’t cuddling cute creatures on his family’s hobby farm, he was practising to be a prolific poultry picker-upper.
"I just wanted to save this peacock’s life I suppose," Jacobsen says. "So I grabbed the bird."
"Then we corralled him into the back gated area behind our studio," Van Ludwig adds.
While Jacobsen and Van Ludwig kept the peacock safe behind a fence, Ferguson started making calls.
He was told the bird had likely wandered far from its home in Beacon Hill Park, but there was no official help available.
"I could have walked away. I felt like it," Ferguson recalls. "But it’s that 'do the right thing moment.'"
So Ferguson asked Jacobsen to pick up the peacock from the enclosure and carry him to his car.
"[Ferguson ] suggested we put the peacock in his PT Cruiser," Van Ludwig says.
With the 'P-T' now standing for 'peacock transportation,' Ferguson committed to cruising the bird back home.
He filmed footage of the peacock peering at him in the rear-view mirror.
"I felt like I was in a French movie," Ferguson smiles. "Instead of a femme fatale, it was a peacock in the back seat."
As the duo drove across the downtown core, Ferguson says the bird pooped once and peered out the window often.
The peacock calmed down after they passed the buildings and approached the trees. When Ferguson parked in the park, the bird popped out of the back door.
"I wanted to hug it or commune with it," Ferguson smiles. "But the bird kept going."
Perhaps he was going to tell his feathered flock a joke that begins with a peacock crossing the road and ends with a punchline about a PT Cruiser and the kindness of strangers.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Why wasn't the suspected Chinese spy balloon shot down over Canada?
Critics say the U.S. and Canada had ample time to shoot down a suspected Chinese spy balloon as it drifted across North America. The alleged surveillance device initially approached North America near Alaska's Aleutian Islands on Jan 28. According to officials, it crossed into Canadian airspace on Jan. 30, travelling above the Northwest Territories, Alberta and Saskatchewan before re-entering the U.S. on Jan 31.

Thieves cut huge hole in Ottawa restaurant wall to get at jewelry store next door
An Ottawa restaurateur says he was shocked to find his restaurant broken into and even more surprised to discover a giant hole in the wall that led to the neighbouring jewelry store.
Rescuers scramble in Turkiye, Syria after quake kills 4,000
Rescue workers and civilians passed chunks of concrete and household goods across mountains of rubble Monday, moving tons of wreckage by hand in a desperate search for survivors trapped by a devastating earthquake.
New details emerge ahead of Trudeau-premiers' health-care meeting
As preparations are underway for the anticipated health-care 'working meeting' between Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Canada's premiers on Tuesday, new details are emerging about how the much-anticipated federal-provincial gathering will unfold.
Quebec minister 'surprised' asylum seekers given free bus tickets from New York City
Quebec's immigration minister says she was 'surprised' to learn the City of New York is helping to provide free bus tickets to migrants heading north to claim asylum in Canada.
The world's deadliest earthquakes since 2000
A magnitude 7.8 earthquake shook Turkiye and Syria on Monday, killing thousands of people. Here is a list of some of the world's deadliest earthquakes since 2000.
Mendicino: foreign-agent registry would need equity lens, could be part of 'tool box'
Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino says a registry to track foreign agents operating in Canada can only be implemented in lockstep with diverse communities.
Vaccine intake higher among people who knew someone who died of COVID-19: U.S. survey
A U.S. survey found that people who had a personal connection to someone who became ill or died of COVID-19 were more likely to have received at least one shot of the vaccine compared to those who didn’t have any loved ones who had been impacted by the disease.
opinion | Don Martin: Alarms going off over health-care privatization? Such an out-of-touch waste of hot political air
The chances Trudeau's health-care summit with the premiers will end with the blueprint to realistic long-term improvements are only marginally better than believing China’s balloon was simply collecting atmospheric temperatures, Don Martin writes in an exclusive column for CTVNews.ca, 'But it’s clearly time the 50-year-old dream of medicare as a Canadian birthright stopped being such a nightmare for so many patients.'