'Lil' Floof the seagull hatched on library roof becomes unofficial mascot - Action News
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Nova Scotia

'Lil' Floof the seagull hatched on library roof becomes unofficial mascot

Halifax Central Library staff had a competition to name the baby seagull. It could have been called Bagel or Seagull, but Lori and 'Lil' floof won.

'It almost became, you know, our little baby, our little child,' library staffer says

Staff first noticed a seagull spending a lot of time sitting around in one spot on the library rooftop. (Halifax Public Libraries)

Halifax Central Library is touted as a place that's about more than books, and that definitely proved true this summer.

It turns out, it's a great place for birds.Well, two in particular.

Staff first noticed a seagull spending a lot of time sitting around in one spot on the library rooftop. It was next to a vent, on vegetation, in view of the patio on the fifth floor.

"And then came the big announcement one morning that the birth, the hatching, had occurred," saidMaureen Collier, the customer service manager at the library.

And that's how the "tiny greyfluff ball," as Collier calls it, found its first home next to Halifax's living room.

Lori 'Lil' Floof

"There were pictures flying around in email throughout the whole library," Collier said. "Staff were so excited."

They even had a big competition to name the baby. It could have been called Bagel or Seagull.

Lori and 'Lil' Floofwon out.

Lori was a suggestion that somehow evolved out of the Latin term for seagull,Larum.

Bird's-eye view

Collier said staffkept tabs on the bird's progress, "seeing the little, little fluff ball move a little further from its mom."

It became a pet project for library staff, wholearnedmore about the birds, their eggs and the nesting period.

Maureen Collier is the customer service manager at the Halifax Central Library. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

"Every opportunity, whether it's you know someone coming in and having a conversation with you, or wildlife on the roof, is an opportunity to learn something new," she said.

Kids were definitely into the experience.

"How often do you get to see a baby bird?" Collier said."It almost became, you know, our little baby, our little child."

Flew the coop

Like all kids, Lori 'Lil' Floofeventually had to leave home.

The bird started stretching its long legs, Collier said.

Then, one day, it wasn't there.

Staff spotted it between the library andDalhousieUniversity buildings next door.

"He had made the leap off of the building and was getting ready to fly away," Collier said."Our little one was growing up."

With files from CBC Radio's Mainstreet