Billy, Eric, Tyson, Jade, and Elsie who all joined Lincolnshire Wildlife Centre’s colony of 200 gray parrots in August, were removed from view this week, The Associated Press reports.
The British
zoo has been forced to separate five foul-mouthed parrots who wouldn't stop
swearing at visitors after they encouraged each other to keep cursing.
“We are quite
used to parrots swearing, but we’ve never had five at the same time,” said the
zoo’s chief executive, Steve Nichols. “Most parrots clam up outside, but for
some reason these five relish it.”
According to
Nichols, none of the zoo's visitors complained about the parrots, and most
found them amusing.
“When a
parrot tells you to ‘f-— off’ it amuses people very highly,” he said Tuesday.
“It’s brought a big smile to a really hard year.”
Nichols said
the parrots have been separated to save children’s ears. They were moved to
different areas of the park so they don't “set each other off,” he said.
Nichols told
BBC News that the parrots "swear to trigger reaction or a response,"
so seeing people shocked or laughing only encourages the birds to curse more.
"With
the five, one would swear and another would laugh and that would carry
on," he said.
"I'm
hoping they learn different words within colonies," Nichols added.
"But if they teach the others bad language and I end up with 250 swearing
birds, I don't know what we'll do," he added.
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