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SINGAPORE: After an online user shared how she rescued a baby bird, many online users took to the comments section to commend the kindness the woman showed the animal.

“I decided to post here to share the beauty of life,” an online user wrote in her post on the Singapore Wildlife Sightings Facebook page on Tuesday (Aug 8). The netizen shared the heartwarming story of how she rescued a baby bird after finding it caught on the edge of its nest.

Image: FB screengrab / Singapore Wildlife Sightings
“If I did not rescue this baby bird, it’d have died,” the netizen wrote. “It got its claw stuck to the plastic nesting material used by its parent. The parent was calling out frantically for several hours. I thought it was encouraging the fledging to fly from the nest. I saw it perched outside the nest.
When I checked one hour later, the fledging was in the same spot on the nest. I suspected it was stuck. I had one bird stuck the same way and died two years ago. That time I didn’t know birds can get stuck this way. So I took the nest in, freed the fledging and placed it amongst some plants. It was still there late evening. Its parent was nearby. The next day it disappeared.”
The online user then shared that the story had a happy ending, saying, “Two days later, I saw the fledging, alive–last photo. I hope you enjoyed my story.”
Image: FB screengrab / Singapore Wildlife Sightings
Image: FB screengrab / Singapore Wildlife Sightings
Image: FB screengrab / Singapore Wildlife Sightings
Image: FB screengrab / Singapore Wildlife Sightings
Image: FB screengrab / Singapore Wildlife Sightings

A handful of online users responded to the post with comments praising and thanking the netizen for her act of kindness. “Thank you for reading the emotion of parents of the baby, desperate parents do seek help from humans but not all people know what happen, and lose the chance to save a helpless creature,” one wrote. “Thank you for sharing your story, which definitely educate us in this aspect, you are blessed.”

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Another wrote, “Thank you so much! Our trash is a death trap for the wild animals. They don’t know the difference between grass and nylon string.” /TISG