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  • 4 days ago
Transcript
00:00If people saw them like this, they wouldn't be misunderstood.
00:06People see them as taking their chips, taking their pasties, which they do,
00:11but we have enticed them inland with our attitude to putting waste out incorrectly.
00:18We've overfished the seas, so natural habitats are being overfished,
00:21so they're just making the most, they're very resourceful,
00:24they're coming inland to get what food they can.
00:27They remember, if you're nice to them,
00:30and I had to do some fairly traumatic treatments on this gull.
00:34I had to tube feed her, I had to give her antiburial tips,
00:37but she remembers me, I could get close to her.
00:43They're just very, very misunderstood birds.
00:46I've always rescued birds, since I was about 12 years old,
00:51various different types,
00:53and my first baby girl came to me about three or four years ago,
00:57which I reared and released.
01:00And then the next year, I had vets ringing me,
01:04as they were falling off roofs, because it was a very, very hot spring,
01:08and it just grew from there.
01:10My reputation has been able to rear and release, spread around,
01:14and I mean, I've had gulls from as far as North Wales and Towning come down.
01:21There's not many people rear baby gulls.
01:25They are very messy, they're very demanding,
01:28and they don't stay in question for long.
01:31But they are also critically endangered on the red list of conservations.
01:39Of all the baby birds, they are one of the messiest, stinkiest birds to rear.
01:45And they need constant cleaning,
01:47constantly get fed three times a day,
01:50and the amount of poop one baby girl can produce is unbelievable.
01:54But if I won the lottery, I'd be doing it full time.
02:00It's a very, very intense six to eight weeks.
02:04And then end of July, first week of August,
02:06it's like, that's it, I am never doing this again.
02:09Until next year.
02:10I'll see you next year.

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