Glasgow Times

‘Eating machine’ emus hit with ban from pub

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AN Australian Outback pub has banned emus for “bad behaviour” and erected barriers to stop the large, flightless birds from creating havoc inside. Locals and tourists have been bemused by the antics of the emus eager to steal food from people in Yaraka, a remote Queensland state outpost with a permanent population of 18.

But things took an intolerabl­e turn last week when two of the birds, Carol and Kevin, discovered they could climb the front stairs of the Yaraka Hotel, publican Chris Gimblett said.

“They’ve learnt to walk up the front steps of the hotel, which has been causing just a few issues,” especially with the amount of their waste, he said.

Gimblett solved the problem by stringing a rope across the top of the stairs. A sign advises customers to replace the rope once they enter because “emus have been banned from this establishm­ent for bad behaviour”.

The inquisitiv­e emus are not yet clever enough to duck under the rope to get inside the pub. While Australian pubs occasional­ly have a parrot in the bar, emus are not indoor birds.

“When emus get a fright, they head in a forward direction but are normally looking behind so they can’t see where they’re going and this is where chaos can happen,” Gimblett said. “They bump into everything.”

Visitors staying at the Yaraka trailer park have been surprised by the lengths emus will go to steal food, including pecking a fried egg off a barbecue plate, Gimblett said.

“They will lean through the trailer door with their long necks and pluck toast out of the toaster,” the publican said.

“If you’ve got a mug of coffee on the little table by the door, they will drink it all, without spilling it I might add. You just discover that your mug’s empty. They’re just eating machines.”

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