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It’s the rare pet bird that’s found safe and sound after it’s been living on its own for a few years — but this is a story with a few surprises and a (mostly) happy ending.
A cockatiel owned by a family in Ephrata, Pennsylvania, escaped from its home about three years ago and had been missing ever since.
The workers received a “gift” and it was sitting on the church porch.
Recently, a woman working at a church in Lancaster County discovered a cockatiel perched on her church’s property.
“I saw that it was a bird. And this bird did not move or fly away,” Louise Duncan, a secretary at Christ United Methodist Church in Lancaster, told Fox News Digital about her discovery.
This little cockatiel was found at Christ United Methodist Church in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. “This bird did not move or fly away,” said Louise Duncan, a secretary at the church.
(Christ United Methodist Church/Louise Duncan)
“He just sort of stared at me with his kind of big bird eyes. I saw that the plume was yellow and that he had orange cheeks. And I thought, This has got to be a pet.”
Duncan phoned ORCA — the Organization for Responsible Care of Animals — an animal rescue group with a location nearby, to request help.
She also took a picture of the bird with her cellphone — and told her pastor, Roseann Goldberg-Taylor of Christ United Methodist Church, that they received a “gift” and it was sitting on the church porch.
The bird — clearly used to being free — became frantic, popped open the box and escaped.
Pastor Goldberg-Taylor corralled the bird into a box and put a lid on it.
But the bird — clearly used to being free — became frantic, popped open the box and escaped, they said.
When an ORCA rescue worker arrived at the church to help out, the worker was able to get the bird into a safe container. ORCA took the bird back to its location to see about reuniting it with its owners.
“We call it a blessing,” Pastor Goldberg-Taylor said of the experience. “We help all God’s creatures at United Methodist Church.”
She added, “Anybody is welcomed at our church, even a cockatiel.”
To confirm the bird’s identity, the family suggested the bird hear the theme song from the ’60s TV show, “The Andy Griffith Show” — the bird had always loved that song.
Once ORCA put a picture of the bird on Facebook, a response soon came in from a family in Ephrata, some 15 miles away from the church.
They said their beloved cockatiel, Lucky, had escaped from their home three years ago — and that this bird might be theirs. They sent pictures of Lucky to Orca.
To confirm the bird’s identity, the family suggested the bird hear the theme song from the 1960s television show, “The Andy Griffith Show” — the bird had loved that song. Sure enough, when the cockatiel heard the tune, it began dancing and whistling.
So this was Lucky — a bird that loved to dance and whistle.
And somehow, ever since it had gone missing, it had survived — on a wing and a prayer.
“To know Lucky’s family truly cared [about him] was great to hear,” ORCA rescue worker Libby Rannels told Fox News Digital.
“And on top of that, it was pretty unbelievable he made it three years, wherever he was. We are just happy he is safe.”
“He has been through a lot for the past few years, and we really just want to give him some stability and consistency. He will be very loved here with us.”
Lucky’s original family cannot take him back at this time. Fox News Digital reached out to the family for comment.
As ORCA’s staff wrote on its Facebook page, “Sometimes the stories don’t end EXACTLY how we hoped, but we still believe it’s a happy ending.”
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They added, “Lucky’s family ultimately decided that they were unable to keep him, and we now have him in our office again. We are thankful they care about him so much that they made this very difficult decision.”
“Our ORCA staff has decided that we are going to keep Lucky as our office pet. He has been through a lot for the past few years, and we really just want to give him some stability and consistency. He will be very loved here with us.”
Louise Duncan of Christ United Methodist Church found the experience to be a teachable moment, she said.
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“I’ve always been one to want to find a good ending to something difficult for something or somebody, like a pet or a person. And [this experience] reinforces the need to never stop doing that,” she said.