Aug 13 2007

That Fowl is Foul-Mouthed!

Published by Joana under Pets & Animals

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Want to take your young children and their friends out on an entertaining yet educational outing? Before you send out invitations for your young children’s friends to come along you might not want to take them by Peaches the cockatoo’s cage:

ALBION, Ind. - People are being careful about their language around an 8-year-old named Peaches who has a habit of learning and repeating the worst she hears.

Peaches is a Moluccan cockatoo, and staffers at Black Pine Animal Park say she used to be a pet in a household where she picked up a vocabulary that can be as colorful as her feathers.

The bird didn’t miss anything when a volunteer construction worker started cussing recently after a chimp threw feces at him, said Jessica Price, senior zookeeper at the sanctuary about 30 miles north of Fort Wayne.

“She started laughing and carrying on,” Price said.

Peaches then reverted to a few of her own favorites.

“Go away, shut up, shut your blankety-blank mouth,” Price said. “She says a lot of very bad words.”

It is difficult to get birds to stop using words they have learned, she said.

“We obviously don’t repeat them,” Price said. “We don’t encourage it.”

(article source)

This makes me want to know where they rescued this animal from, in a way. Then I think about all the times I’ve lost my temper and cussed up such a storm that would make a sailor blush, and I’m glad my cat’s can’t talk. I imagine they could teach many quite a few things.

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