A sparrow has set up home with an elderly couple in Fukaya, in Japan's
Saitama prefecture, becoming the newest member of their family.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiPRnSdqMU6dhqeGn0NuboJyJknEeMhUkT0v4Yz08J4P5wljEwBjBlx-ZdkzNRvY7LMoCUPxC5YWVCx9TuBOTZo62_1bp9fP323xyKtPoOfJ_VvYqBis7ECqysbKLQ0ia9sgA8mzW-MyvY/s200/sparrow+3.jpg)
Yoshiko Fujino said she first saw the bird, named Pee Chan, in
mid-November while working as a traffic guide for local school children.
It followed her home, resting on her shoulder and not wanting to leave.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjfVqm3N7HPEnPu_c8yP2TZfN7lhKln-GHsl4o033TLM1owfAejF3_0rD_ndGhGlWFBggr5Y1Y4qG67QxqgT7pl6GMJgCN6XJAfHFbaXMAEoQ-ielvR-UyYRJ40BPfc7WdmxfQ6C9ctd84/s200/sparrow+2.jpg)
"He's like a family member, he's very comforting.
It's fun, coming home to a sparrow," she
said.
"My grandchildren have grown up, and there's none who are still small,
so I don't know how to say it clearly, but he's like a family member."
Fujino assumes the sparrow, which appears comfortable in the
surroundings, is wild, but also says she does not rule out the
possibility the bird was once a household pet.
With video. Or you can
watch it at YouTube.
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