INT37
International/WildLifeCrash-landing to
birth: story of an 'Indian' duckBy Venkata VemuriLondon, Sep 26 IANS Houdini, an
Indian Runner duck, was still in his egg when a sea gull scooped him up and threw him from a height of 30
feet. But the lucky
bird managed to survive and was happily reunited with his
mother and four siblings.Barrie Tolley, a Devon
farmer, saw a sea gull swoop down on his duck
farm and lift off with a duck's egg. The
bird couldn't keep a grip and dropped the egg. It plummeted 30
feet to the ground.Sheer curiosity made Tolley locate the egg. He found it surprisingly intact, with faint cracks on it. Hoping against hope, he put it in an incubator.Five hours later, the duckling fought its way out and is now 10 days old. Tolley named him Houdini.Tolley, who runs the Rare Breeds
Farm in Totnes, Devon, told the Daily
Mail: "Seeing the egg fall from the seagull was terrible, but Houdini is clearly a lucky little thing. Had he been dropped from 10
feet higher or had hit one of the
concrete slabs, it would have been a different story."Houdini comes from a rare duck species called the
Indian Runner. The first
record of the
Indian Runner's arrival in
Britain dates back to 1830. Originally named the Penguin Duck as its bearing resembled that of a penguin, it got its second name after being cross-bred with domestic ducks in the 19th century. A
web search locates its description from a
book by the
Indian Runner Ducks
Association: "Its long, narrow head on a thin neck sets on a long apparently attenuated body, having an extraordinarily upright carriage, which last is accounted for by the thighs, legs and shanks being excessively short and placed so far back that the
bird is obliged to carry itself erect to enable it to walk or run, which latter it can do with some
degree of rapidity."It was originally imported from Bombay now
Mumbai. The
London zoo received a batch of them in 1985. Some of them were later bred at the Surrey
zoo between 1837-38.Duck enthusiasts
thought it was of
Indian origin because of its import from that
country. However,
bird historians have been debating - even coming to blows as
records show - on its true origins: whether it came from
India or from the Javan islands further east.The debate is still inconclusive. The sea gull still flies around the Totnes
farm. Houdini is still under Tolley's watchful
eyes. --Indo-Asian
News Serviceven/sh/tb 462
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