Junior ecologist and birding blogger Connor Pimm captured the hoopoe on camera between Littlebeck and Fylingdales in the North York Moors last week.
Hoopoes are native to Asia and Africa and spend the summer in southern Europe, but are occasionally blown off course and arrive in the UK.
Around 100 are recorded annually – but overwhelmingly in the south of England and they are rarely seen in Yorkshire.
It was seen south of the May Beck car park near the Newton House Plantation.
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In 2020, a hoopoe that spent around a week in Yorkshire was thought to be the first seen in the area since the 1970s.
Mr Pimm said: “There have been one or two reports this year in North Yorkshire, including down near Osmotherley and Robin Hood’s Bay but these could relate to the same bird.
“I think the last widely seen one was Collingham; there have been one or two elsewhere in Yorkshire but they’ve usually not been seen again. I didn’t find the bird myself, just followed up an earlier report of it.”
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