219.
Sir Penguin
221.
Pit Bull & Kitten
13 July 2001
Mother duck's 'bird brain' saves ducklings
She grabs police officer by pant leg to lead him to her brood trapped under
grate
Nicholas Read Vancouver Sun

Ray Peterson, Special to the Sun /
Mother duck shows police officer where her
ducklings fell through a grate into a sewer underneath the Granville Street
Bridge.
Don't mention "bird brains" to Ray Petersen, because after what happened this
week, he won't hear a word of it.
Petersen, a community police officer for Granville Downtown South, was walking
in the 1500-block Granville Street (directly under the Granville Bridge)
Wednesday morning when a duck came up and grabbed him by the pant leg. Then it
started waddling around him and quacking.
"I thought it was a bit goofy, so I shoved it away," Petersen said in an
interview.
But the duck, a female (he thinks it was a mallard), wasn't about to give up
that easily. Making sure she still had Petersen's eye, she waddled up the road
about 20 metres and lay on a storm sewer grate.
Petersen watched and thought nothing of it.
"But when I started walking again, she did the same thing. She ran around and
grabbed me again."
It became obvious to him then that something was up.
So when she waddled off to the sewer grate a second time, Petersen decided to
follow.
"I went up to where the duck was lying and saw eight little babies in the water
below. They had fallen down between the grates."
So Petersen took action. He phoned police Sergeant Randy Kellens, who arrived at
the scene and, in turn, got in touch with two more constables.
"When they came down, the duck ran around them as well, quacking. Then she lay
down on the grate," Petersen said.
While Kellens looked over into the grate, the duck sat on the curb and watched.
Then the two constables, John Schilling and Allison Hill, marshalled a tow truck
that lifted the grate out of position, allowing the eight ducklings to be
rescued one by one with a vegetable strainer.
"While we were doing this, the mother duck just lay there and watched," Petersen
says.
Once the ducklings were safe, however, she set about marching them down to False
Creek, where they jumped into the water.
Kellens followed them to make sure they were all right, but elected to remain on
shore.
The experience has changed Petersen's mind about ducks. He thinks they're a lot
smarter than he used to.
And while he never ate duck before, he says he wouldn't dream of it now.
It started with a tug on officer Ray Peterson's trousers. While on routine foot patrol in downtown Vancouver, a female duck approached the officer and grabbed his pant leg until he followed her to a sewer grate.
Through the opening, the officer could see her eight small ducklings that had fallen into the water below.
July 13 -- When a family of ducklings fell down a Vancouver sewer grate their mother did what any parent would do. She got help from a passing police officer.
Vancouver police officer Ray Peterson admitted he was not sure what to make of the duck that grabbed him by the pant leg while he was on foot patrol on Wednesday evening in a neighborhood near the city's downtown.
"I though it was a bit goofy, so I shoved it away," Peterson told the Vancouver Sun newspaper.
The mother duck persisted, grabbing Peterson's leg again when he tried to leave, and then waddling to a nearby sewer grate where she sat down and waited for him to follow and investigate.
"I went up to where the duck was lying and saw eight little babies in the water below," he said.
Police said they removed the heavy metal grate with the help of a tow truck and used a vegetable strainer to lift the ducklings to safety.
Mother and offspring then departed for a nearby pond.