Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Friends-Of-Feathers Flock Together To Save Ducklings Imprisoned On Police Patio

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Apr, 2015 10:35 AM
    Vancouver's finest have hatched a plan to help 10 jail birds fly the coop from police headquarters, and everything turned out ducky in the end.
     
    Sgt. Randy Fincham says a concerned citizen reported a mother duck and nine ducklings marooned on the third-floor patio ledge at the police department on Sunday.
     
    Officers responded, and after a brief investigation determined the mother likely laid her eggs near the building's outdoor vegetable garden, where they were born.
     
    Fincham says three officers and a wildlife volunteer corralled the ducklings into a box and took them to street level, where they were soon joined by their mother, who swooped down from the building.
     
    Fincham says the police and volunteer worked together to stop traffic, cyclists and the occasional dog as they walked the box of ducklings towards False Creek while the mother waddled behind.
     
    He says the birds were safely released into the water, and the group learned that policing isn't always quite what it's quacked up to be.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Municipality's Software Violates Employees' Privacy Rights: B.C. Commissioner

    Municipality's Software Violates Employees' Privacy Rights: B.C. Commissioner
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's privacy commissioner says a municipality violated privacy rights by secretly installing computer spyware the mayor says was used to bug his computer.

    Municipality's Software Violates Employees' Privacy Rights: B.C. Commissioner

    Future Shop Closure Illustrates Challenges Facing Canadian Retailers

    Future Shop Closure Illustrates Challenges Facing Canadian Retailers
    TORONTO — The sudden closure of Future Shop electronics stores demonstrates the evolution taking place in the Canadian retail space amid increased competition from online shopping, analysts say.

    Future Shop Closure Illustrates Challenges Facing Canadian Retailers

    Federal Anti-terrorism Bill Changes Not Enough To Satisfy Concerns

    Federal Anti-terrorism Bill Changes Not Enough To Satisfy Concerns
    OTTAWA — A Conservative plan to amend the federal anti-terrorism bill hasn't squelched opposition to the sweeping security legislation.

    Federal Anti-terrorism Bill Changes Not Enough To Satisfy Concerns

    Landing An Aircraft In Bad Weather Depends On Many Variables, But Ultimately Up To Pilot

    Landing An Aircraft In Bad Weather Depends On Many Variables, But Ultimately Up To Pilot
    HALIFAX — Pilots make the final call on whether it's safe to land a plane in bad weather, such as the conditions that prevailed early Sunday when an Air Canada passenger jet crashed at Halifax airport, aviation industry experts say.

    Landing An Aircraft In Bad Weather Depends On Many Variables, But Ultimately Up To Pilot

    Lawyer For Man Accused Of Child Pornography Says Films Of Naked Boys Weren't Sexual

    Lawyer For Man Accused Of Child Pornography Says Films Of Naked Boys Weren't Sexual
    TORONTO — The lawyer for a man accused in a sweeping child pornography investigation says the movies his client distributed online weren't sexual in nature but simply showed "naked boys doing silly things."

    Lawyer For Man Accused Of Child Pornography Says Films Of Naked Boys Weren't Sexual

    Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case

    Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case
    TORONTO — A sentencing hearing for Sunrise Propane, the Ontario company convicted in a deadly explosion at a Toronto propane plant, has resumed today after a 10-month adjournment.

    Sentencing Hearing Resumes In Deadly Sunrise Propane Explosion Case