The Timaru Herald

Morepork saved from bullying tui

- JAMES PASLEY

An Auckland mother and her son stepped into a pecking disorder to save one lucky morepork, or ruru.

On January 3, Sandringha­m resident Brigette Jones and her 3-year-old son Blake were walking on Mt Albert’s summit when they discovered a morepork being divebombed by a group of enraged tui.

‘‘I noticed there was a bit of a commotion going on in the tree, and I looked over and saw there were some tui squawking and diving over what I thought was a baby tui,’’ Jones said.

‘‘But when I walked over I realised it was actually a morepork and he was in quite a bit of trouble.’’

The morepork was flapping around on the ground and when it didn’t fly away she realised something was wrong, she said.

Jones and Blake quickly stood guard over the injured bird, which had a broken wing, keeping the tui at bay while they figured out what to do, she said.

Jones ended up carefully bundling the morepork up into her rain jacket and taking it to the vet, she said.

During the trip the native owl was placid and didn’t attempt to scratch her or her son with his talons, she said.

‘‘He looked at me sheepishly, half terrified.

‘‘He didn’t fight or anything like that.’’

They later named the morepork Porky because of its breed, not because of any excess weight, she said.

‘‘I’m hopeful he makes a full recovery and ends up back in his old home. It would be really nice if Mt Albert residents could hear him again in the middle of the night.’’

New Zealand Bird Rescue Charitable Trust hospital manager Karen Simpson, who was looking half after Porky, said the owl was looking noticeably better.

‘‘Whenever I go to check on it, it rolls on its back, which is a defence mechanism. It wasn’t doing that before, so it’s feeling much stronger.’’

Porky was given pain relief and anti-inflammato­ry medication twice a day, and would hopefully be released back into the wild in a few weeks, she said.

It was not known if Porky was male of female, she said.

Ark in the Park manager Gillian Wadams said that because morepork were not a threatened

 ?? PHOTOS: JAMES PASLEY/STUFF ?? Porky the morepork was found flapping around on the ground with a broken wing.
PHOTOS: JAMES PASLEY/STUFF Porky the morepork was found flapping around on the ground with a broken wing.
 ??  ?? Brigette Jones and her 3-year-old son Blake discovered Porky the morepork being divebombed by tui.
Brigette Jones and her 3-year-old son Blake discovered Porky the morepork being divebombed by tui.

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