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To: Larry Voyles who wrote (37)10/22/1998 8:24:00 PM
From: .comRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 54
 
Thursday October 22 4:19 PM EDT

Amorous emu fails to get her man

MOBILE, Ala. (Reuters) - A 6-foot-tall, 150-pound emu that fell head over heels in love
with an Alabama man and stalked him for days was turned loose Thursday on a farm
populated by
her own species.

''It was mating season and she took a fond liking to him,'' Diane Roberts, director of the
Mobile, Alabama, Animal Rescue Foundation, told Reuters. ''He had to ward her off with
a boat
paddle. She was absolutely intent that this was her mate.''

The giant bird showed up at the home of Ed and Ann Stuardi last month, drinking from a
bird bath and eating berries in their yard. They fed it dog food.

Last week the emu began following Ed Stuardi around. Then it became aggressive,
chasing their cats. Stuardi tried to frighten the bird away by shooting his gun into the air.
The emu just
stood there, looking at him forlornly.

By Monday, it was making noises deep in its throat, a mating call Stuardi failed to
recognize as the bird approached him. Shorter than than the bird, he held it off with a boat
paddle.

Monday night and Tuesday, the Stuardis cowered inside their home. Ann Stuardi called
the sheriff to beg for help but was told deputies didn't have the equipment to catch the
bird. That's
when Animal Rescue Foundation got involved.

''She pursued him. They had been feeding her, and when mating season hit, he almost got
it. She had her heart set on this man,'' said Roberts.

''I've never seen an emu hold hostages,'' she said. ''He wasn't aware what the bird
wanted, or why she was stalking him. I've never seen one stalk a human with procreation
in mind.''

Animal Rescue had been looking for the bird since Aug. 22, when it heard that a man had
moved away from the area, abandoning three emus. The other two birds still have not been
found.

It took several hours for the rescue team to persuade the bird to get into a horse trailer so it
could be taken to a farm that cares for injured wildlife. Roberts said the emu's only injury
was a
broken heart, and it was released into an area with other emus, including several males.

''Hopefully she will meet another fellow and forget all about Mr. Stuardi. After all, he is a
married man,'' Roberts said.

dailynews.yahoo.com