Swearing parrots were removed from view after throwing ‘all manner of obscenities’ at park visitors



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Weeks after the parrots were separated and kept away from the public, they were recently re-displayed by park employees, but the useless-mouthed herd got back into it.  (File photo)

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Weeks after the parrots were separated and kept away from the public, park employees recently put them back on display, but the useless-mouthed herd got back into it. (File photo)

These parrots are so over 2020.

A British wildlife park had to remove five newly adopted parrots from public view after they repeatedly yelled profanity at visitors, park officials say.

The foul-mouthed birds were initially quarantined in the same room after being adopted last month by Lincolnshire Wildlife Park in eastern England, local media reported.

But the employees soon learned that all the animals were prone to cursing and decided to divide them up, said the park’s executive director, Steve Nichols.

“The more they swear, the more you laugh normally, which makes them swear again,” he said. Lincolnshire Live.

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“But when four or five come together who have learned to curse and naturally have learned to laugh, when one swears, one laughs and before you know it, it is like the stage of an old workers club where everyone is cursing and laughing, ”he said.

Weeks after the parrots were separated and kept away from the public, they were recently re-displayed by park employees, but the useless-mouthed herd got back into it.

“Literally within 20 minutes of being in the intro, they told us they had sworn against a client, and for the next group of people all kinds of obscenities came up,” Nichols said.

The birds have now been placed in an enclosure away from visitors and will be divided again so that “at least if they swear, it’s not as bad as three or four of them exploding at once,” he said. Lincolnshire Live.

Nichols explained that all five birds are African gray parrots and they can easily learn general words and sounds. Her park has seen an influx of parrot donations during the coronavirus pandemic.

“Normally we would catch one or two parrots in fifteen days. Today we received eight, “he told CNN.

This is the second time in recent weeks that the park has made headlines because of a talented bird. A parrot named Chico went viral over the summer with his version of Beyoncé If I was a boy, which earned him his own Instagram page.

– New York Daily News

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