LOOK: This is why Icelanders throw puffins off cliffs

A puffin is with a freshly caught fish in its beak above the cliffs of Heimaey island, Vestmannaeyjar, Iceland. The Vestmannaeyjar archipelago is home to more than 700 000 pairs of puffins who migrate to the islands for the nesting season each summer. However, this season has seen a large drop in puffin numbers as a result of a lack of food and climate change. File picture: PA via Reuters

A puffin is with a freshly caught fish in its beak above the cliffs of Heimaey island, Vestmannaeyjar, Iceland. The Vestmannaeyjar archipelago is home to more than 700 000 pairs of puffins who migrate to the islands for the nesting season each summer. However, this season has seen a large drop in puffin numbers as a result of a lack of food and climate change. File picture: PA via Reuters

Published Sep 19, 2022

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Traditions, for many of us, are the things we usually do with family, such as Christmas lunch, Heritage Day braais or going to the beach on New Year's Day. But whatever your tradition is, it doesn’t come anywhere close to being as cool as a tradition in Iceland, one that you may want to add to your bucket list.

TikTok user @kyanasue, aka Kyana Sue Powers, shared with the world an Icelandic tradition which might come as a bit of a shock. Her clip starts off with someone throwing a bird, a puffin, off a steep cliff with seemingly treacherous waters below.

Video: @kyanasue/TikTok

Before you get all worked up and angry, there is a reasonable explanation for this.

Towards the end of every Icelandic summer, baby puffins are born on the Westman Islands.

These babies are known as pufflings.

A puffin seen from the cliffs of Heimaey island, Vestmannaeyjar, Iceland. Picture: PA via Reuters

Naturally, pufflings are meant to fly to sea, but thanks to an increase in artificial light sources around the bird's breeding grounds, they become disoriented, confusing these lights for moonlight, which they are wired to seek out.

Knowing this, droves of townsfolk come out during the summer evenings to help provide the little pufflings with some direction. But catching a fleeing puffling is no easy feat, as shown in Powers’s videos.

When the pufflings come out of their burrows for their first flights out to sea, the townspeople are waiting to snap them up so they can be released safely towards the sea, away from artificial light.

Powers says in the video that even pufflings swimming in the harbour get confused and have to be caught with nets as the oils in the water may make it difficult for them to swim, even though they’re strong swimmers.

Puffins are pelagic (open sea) seabirds that feed primarily by diving in the water. Think of them as penguins who learnt to fly.

Tiktok user Torri van Putten commented: “You had me in the beginning, I thought people were just YEETING them for no reason.”

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