Bulgarians rush to save frozen storks, feed them fish at home
ZARITSA – Agence France-Presse
What would you do if you came upon scores of distressed storks covered in ice, lying in a snow-covered field? In Bulgaria, people have been taking them home.
A cold snap in the country’s northeast has stranded hundreds of the migrating birds this week, covering their wings in ice and grounding them.
“I found five frozen storks near the village road the day before yesterday,” Safet Halil, 53, from the village of Zaritsa near the town of Dulovo told AFP on March 21.
“I took them home, lit a stove to warm them and fed them fish.”
The road maintenance worker sparked a wave of support on social media on March 19 and others in the region followed his example, with over 40 birds sheltered inside people’s homes, garages or barns.
Experts said that the freezing of their wings had forced the birds to spend the night on the ground instead of perched on trees as usual.
“It’s the first time we have seen so many storks in distress in Bulgaria,” Hristina Klisurova from the Green Balkans wildlife rehabilitation center in Stara Zagora said on March 21.
She nevertheless appealed on public television for people to “avoid taking in just any stork” but only “those who are in a state of distress: injured or with frozen wings” and to also release any saved birds back into nature as soon as possible.
With the spell of high winds, sub-zero temperatures and snowstorms set to continue until the end of the week, Safet said he planned to keep his five companions in for several more days.
“It is minus three degrees Celsius [27 Fahrenheit] today and the weather is getting worse,” he said.
Apart from that, the birds have recovered and were doing well.
“I already received two or three beak pinches on the arms,” he smiled.
Bulgaria counted almost 6,000 inhabited stork nests in 2016, around 1,000 more than the previous count 10 years before.
In neighboring Romania, meanwhile, more than 200 small birds, most of them song thrushes, were found frozen to death this week, Ovidiu Bufnila from the Romanian ornithological society told AFP.
She advised people not to try to catch storks and said this would panic them and make them lose energy. Only those that approach need human help, she said.