In a twist of avian audacity, a British wildlife park has found itself grappling with a feathered problem: foul-mouthed parrots. These mischievous parrots—specifically, African gray parrots—have been ...
A wildlife park outside London known for its singing parrot has a problem on its hands. Well, five other parrots at the wildlife park have had to be separated... because they curse and were ...
Emily Kwong and Berly McCoy of NPR's Short Wave talk about why swearing might improve physical performance, how birds' bills changed during the pandemic and why scientists are sampling whale breath.
A group of five swearing parrots continues to spew "naughty" words at a wildlife park in England -- and people apparently can't get enough of the "fowl" language. The Lincolnshire Wildlife Park in ...
FRISKNEY, England – A wildlife park in England says it had to remove five parrots from public display because they started swearing at guests. The BBC reports that Lincolnshire Wildlife Park adopted ...
A British zoo has removed a group of parrots from public view because the birds kept letting the cuss words fly. The Lincolnshire Wildlife Park said they moved the five African gray parrots into ...
Five parrots have been removed from public view at a British wildlife park after they started swearing at customers. The foul-mouthed birds were split up after they launched a number of different ...
This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated. LONDON (AP) — A British zoo has had to ...