Resilient Rupert weathers another storm
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT HARBOR -- As Chloe the cat and Pobre Cito the Chihuahua
settled in for a Monday morning nap, a celebrity was probably the last
thing the two mascots at All Creatures Care Cottage in Costa Mesa
expected to see carried through the door.
But then, around 10 a.m., the arrival of Newport Harbor’s beloved
troublemaker caused some commotion in the otherwise sleepy animal
hospital.
Orange County Harbor Patrol officers had lifted Rupert, a black swan,
out of his stomping grounds after a fish hook got caught in his beak and
a string of fishing line had injured his throat.
“Rupert, you’re ready?” Mike Teague, a Newport Beach police animal
control officer, jokingly asked the bird as he lifted him out of his
truck.
Once inside, the center of attention himself didn’t seem too bothered
by the events and took care of a little preening as Joel Pasco, the
hospital’s veterinarian, cleaned the wound and gave Rupert a shot of
antibiotics as a precaution.
But Monday’s vet visit was peanuts compared with the swan’s near-death
experience last year when he swam through a diesel fuel spill. He’s also
had his fair share of fishing line encounters in the past. A pink scar on
his otherwise black, right leg serves as a reminder.
Rupert’s not the only bird with fishing equipment problems in the
harbor.
“It’s a pretty common occurrence where there is fishing,” said Teague,
adding that sea gulls and other birds also get tangled with hooks and
lines.
Rubert managed to survive his latest troublesome encounter with little
problem.
“He’s doing good,” Teague said Monday afternoon, adding that Rupert
jumped back into the water on his return to the harbor.
The swan’s adopted “mother” didn’t seem too pleased with Rupert’s
behavior.
“He just can’t keep that beak of his out of trouble,” said Balboa
activist Gay Wassall-Kelly, who’s chronicled Rupert’s adventures for the
past five or six years.
And right now is not the time for reckless stunts, she added. After
almost two years of boyish indifference to Pearl, a female black swan who
had been brought to the harbor as Rupert’s companion, love seems to have
finally struck Newport Beach’s favorite bird.
“Just on Saturday, the two of them got married,” Wassall-Kelly said,
adding that little Pearls and Ruperts could soon arrive as a result.
“If they stay out of trouble,” she said, laughing.
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