Catty1
06-20-2007, 12:12 PM
http://www.cbc.ca/cp/Oddities/070620/K062004AU.html
What does it take to rescue a kitten? 5 firefighters and 905 litres of water
Published: Wednesday, June 20, 2007 | 5:30 AM ET
Canadian Press
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP) - It took two fire trucks, five firefighters, several animal rescuers and about 950 litres of water to rescue a two-pound kitten.
Animal control officers tried coaxing the grey tabby out of a storm sewer drain with encouraging words and food Monday before giving up after about an hour and a half. Firefighters tried banging tools on one end of the pipe and flashing lights Monday night in hopes of driving him out the other end - but that didn't work either.
It wasn't until firefighters flushed about 905 litres of water through the 25-to 38-centimetre pipe - enough to wet the kitten's paws - and the feline rushed into the hands of Firefighter Kevin Siers, who was standing inside a manhole.
"We had about an hour and a half of fun," Siers said Tuesday. "Everybody was pretty tickled" when the cat emerged.
After a very frightening day and night, the kitten seemed more relaxed and was warming up to humans, said Dan Hendrickson with the Humane Society of Parkersburg.
A visitor to the shelter signed adoption papers Tuesday.
What does it take to rescue a kitten? 5 firefighters and 905 litres of water
Published: Wednesday, June 20, 2007 | 5:30 AM ET
Canadian Press
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP) - It took two fire trucks, five firefighters, several animal rescuers and about 950 litres of water to rescue a two-pound kitten.
Animal control officers tried coaxing the grey tabby out of a storm sewer drain with encouraging words and food Monday before giving up after about an hour and a half. Firefighters tried banging tools on one end of the pipe and flashing lights Monday night in hopes of driving him out the other end - but that didn't work either.
It wasn't until firefighters flushed about 905 litres of water through the 25-to 38-centimetre pipe - enough to wet the kitten's paws - and the feline rushed into the hands of Firefighter Kevin Siers, who was standing inside a manhole.
"We had about an hour and a half of fun," Siers said Tuesday. "Everybody was pretty tickled" when the cat emerged.
After a very frightening day and night, the kitten seemed more relaxed and was warming up to humans, said Dan Hendrickson with the Humane Society of Parkersburg.
A visitor to the shelter signed adoption papers Tuesday.