An Injured Seabird Pecks at an Emergency Room Door, Prompting Its Own Rescue
Medical staff and firefighters successfully removed a triple fishing hook from a cormorant’s beak, preventing potential infection and starvation, before releasing it back into the hospital park.
- An injured cormorant pecked at an emergency room door in Germany, prompting medical staff to call firefighters for its rescue.
- The cormorant had a triple fishing hook stuck in its beak when it approached the hospital door.
- Firefighters and medical staff removed the fishhook, treated the wound, and later released the bird into the hospital park.
38 Articles
38 Articles
Injured Seabird Goes to ER, Pecks on Door
An injured seabird sought help by pecking at the door of an emergency room at a hospital in Germany until medical staff noticed it and called firefighters to help with its rescue. The cormorant, a shiny black waterbird, had a triple fishing hook stuck in its beak when it made...
Injured seabird desperately pecks at hospital door for help
An injured seabird sought help by pecking on a German hospital’s emergency room door. The black cormorant had a triple fishing hook stuck in its beak when it showed up Sunday at a hospital in the northern city of Bremen.
In fact, cormorants are shy animals. But this bird in Bremen perhaps knew how dangerous the hook was in his beak. He made himself felt in the emergency room.
A cormorant in distress caused excitement in a hospital in Bremen. The animal had several fishing hooks in its beak, the staff reacted calmly.
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