Casper the seagull is a bit of an enigma. He carries the name of a friendly cartoon ghost who also disappears.
But Casper the seagull keeps reappearing, almost every day for the past two years since Merrin Fairless noticed him struggling with a fishing line tangled around his legs and with a hook in his face, as she did her daily thing vending fruit from a trailer in Napier’s Marine Parade.
Herself a fixture on the parade, she sought the assistance of residents across the road, one of whom used a pair of pliers to cut the hook off, and the white-and-grey gull was free to go — but it didn’t.
“There was nothing of him, because, of course, he wasn’t able to eat,” she said, relating how Casper took to a bowl of water and kept at it until he couldn’t take any more, and how cat food was produced from a resident’s home to add to the nourishment.
She soon noticed the gull returning each day, decided it was a “him”, named him Casper, and started preparing food for the bird each day.