Bird of the Day!
Nature rarely commits to a bit this hard. Behold the blue-footed booby, a seabird of the South American coast and the Galápagos, who walks around on a pair of feet so aggressively, unapologetically blue they look photoshopped onto a clown.
Those feet aren’t just a fashion statement—they’re a résumé. The blue comes from carotenoid pigments in the booby’s fish diet, so a brighter foot means a healthier, better-provisioned mate. To advertise, males perform a courtship dance that’s essentially high-stepping in slow motion, lifting each ridiculous foot like he’s very proud of his new shoes and wants you to notice. Females, being sensible, judge accordingly.
And occasionally a booby goes rogue. A few years back, a pair turned up wildly off-script in Baltimore, perching on a downtown wire over the harbor—thousands of miles from their home. Birders from up and down the Eastern Seaboard descended like it was a rock concert, binoculars raised, to witness two tropical clowns in shoes that didn’t belong in Maryland.
Honestly? Iconic behavior. Stay weird, booby.
