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Blind duck adopted after being ‘bullied’ by other ducks

The duck, named locally as Geraldine, was taken to animal charity Pawz for Thought in Sunderland.

Lynn Rusk
Wednesday 04 December 2024 20:59 GMT
Geraldine was rescued from a local pond after residents raised concerns over her wellbeing (Pawz for Thought/PA)
Geraldine was rescued from a local pond after residents raised concerns over her wellbeing (Pawz for Thought/PA)

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A blind duck who was “bullied” and “pecked at” by other ducks has been rescued and adopted, an animal charity said.

The bird, named locally as Geraldine, was rescued from Whitburn Pond in South Tyneside after locals raised concerns about its wellbeing.

Geraldine, who has cataracts, was taken to animal charity Pawz for Thought in Sunderland on Sunday by a worried resident.

“I got a phone call about a week ago from a lady who was very concerned because the duck was going blind, and they’d been feeding it for years on the pond,” Lynne Ebdale, founding director of the charity, told the PA news agency.

Every need will be met, her food will be where she can find it, she will have no competition from other birds and won’t be bullied or pecked at again

Lynne Ebdale

“They’d noticed she was going downhill because her feathers were getting a bit tatty and torn, and she was obviously going blind.”

Just 20 minutes after being brought in two volunteers with a “weak spot for everything old and disabled” dropped in, Ms Ebdale said.

The pair had adopted Geraldine within an hour of her arrival.

“We haven’t got facilities here where she would have been very comfortable because we’ve got short-term pens and things,” said Ms Ebdale.

“It’s so busy here we cannot give her the cost of care that she needs. She needs to be able to find her food.

“She always needs to be warm and dry and she needs to be safe from other animals, because other animals may target her eyes.”

Ms Ebdale said Geraldine is now in a home where her “every need will be met, her food will be where she can find it, she will have no competition from other birds and won’t be bullied or pecked at again”.

Geraldine will have her eyes checked by a vet in the coming days.

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